The Star Early Edition

Worry over visa applicatio­ns in Zim

- Open letter to the Minister of Home Affairs Batsirai Tikunde

DEAR Prof Hlengiwe Mkhize, greetings to you, I hope my letter finds you well and rested after your exceptiona­l Budget Vote in Parliament.

I am pleased to note that you are carrying on with the work of your predecesso­r Malusi Gigaba who, in my opinion, ran the Department of Home Affairs in an impressive fashion.

Given your profession­al and academic history, I have no doubt that you will exceed in your role, especially with your plan to modernise the department.

Prof, I would like to bring to your attention an area that sits as deeply concerning for me and many others, which is how the SA embassy manages visa applicatio­ns in Zimbabwe. You have been appraising critical skills visa (applicatio­ns) for anything between four days and four weeks.

Are you aware that in Zimbabwe, it takes a minimum of four to eight months and sometimes more to get a response on a critical skills visa?

Are you aware that these timelines are even worse for general work visas to the point that some people take more than a year waiting for a response?

Prof, I do not know if you are aware, but when one applies for a South African visa in Zimbabwe, their passport is taken away on submission of the applicatio­n.

What this effectivel­y means is that for the duration that they will be adjudicati­ng on your applicatio­n, you cannot go anywhere.

A passport is an important identity and travel document that is taken away from you.

Prof, please help me understand, is there a good reason for them taking one’s passport?

If the timelines from submission to adjudicati­on were reasonable, I would not have written this letter.

However, in the process, one loses other opportunit­ies that may need a passport to travel to other countries.

When one submits an applicatio­n in SA, their passport is NOT taken away from them but the opposite is true for the South African embassy in Zimbabwe. May I plead with you, Prof, to ensure that the conditions one gets in SA with regards to this be aligned to those in Zimbabwe?

With the introducti­on of VFS in the country, applicants no longer have anywhere to ask why the process is taking too long as the mission office has become inaccessib­le, while the VFS officials rightly tell clients that they do not have any jurisdicti­on over the processing, neither can they explain why it is taking so long.

Another sore point is that the office in Zimbabwe seems to be rejecting applicatio­ns willy-nilly for seemingly petty if not unjustifia­ble reasons.

I know of an applicant who was told they could not prove sufficient funds yet they had a job offer with a salary way above R10 000 per month.

I know of another who was rejected for the same reasons with no job offer, but a bank statement confirming a decent inflow of money from a sponsor until he found employment.

I have heard cases of some who were told their documents had expired and needed to resubmit yet when they submitted them they were current and valid, because the adjudicati­on process took too long.

This has led me and many others to ask whether the SA mission in Zimbabwe is genuine in processing applicatio­ns, or merely raising revenue and rejecting genuine applicatio­ns to frustrate the process?

I am, on the other hand, elated by the potential scrapping of visas for African travellers.

I am not sure if this will translate to work visas as well.

Please may you provide clarity? Concerned Zimbabwean Citizen

WRITE TO US

 ??  ?? CALL TO INTERVENE: The writer has alerted Home Affairs Minister Hlengiwe Mkhize to tardy handling of visa applicatio­ns at the SA embassy in Zimbabwe.
CALL TO INTERVENE: The writer has alerted Home Affairs Minister Hlengiwe Mkhize to tardy handling of visa applicatio­ns at the SA embassy in Zimbabwe.

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