Stranded expats appeal for help
SOME South Africans stranded abroad have turned to a private investigator in a desperate attempt to get back home.
South African Declan Miller, the manager of Crest Hawk Investigations, a Cambodia-based detective agency, said he had received multiple requests from South Africans in Cambodia and Thailand for assistance.
“The embassy in Bangkok is helpful but they seem to be overwhelmed with work. We have also had a case of a South African elderly male who is stranded in a rural area of Cambodia. His family reached out to us, but he has simply gone off the radar.”
Miller, originally from Durban, has been living in Cambodia for nearly five years and said the majority of South Africans in the country were English teachers.
“With all schools being ordered to be closed, most teachers have been left with little to no salary at all. South African tourists have had to rely on the goodwill of strangers in Phnom Penh, or from money sent to them by their families back home.”
International Relations and Co-operation (Dirco) Minister Naledi Pandor, meanwhile, said authorities continued to work to bring stranded South Africans home.
During a briefing yesterday, Pandor said Dirco had facilitated the repatriation of 5 239 South Africans stranded abroad – more South Africans than the initial 3637 who had requested repatriation.
She said they had also received requests from South Africans who had lost their jobs or simply run out of money.
“The process of repatriation is not easy, given the various restrictions implemented by countries across the world. South Africans abroad requiring repatriation have been encouraged to contact our embassies to enable the department to assess the demand in each country.
“The department is aware of many other South Africans who remain stranded abroad and continues to appeal for their patience as we explore ways of bringing them home,” Pandor said.