Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

SA to repatriate smuggled Zim children

- Mashudu Netsianda Senior Reporter

THE South Africa government intends to repatriate eight undocument­ed Zimbabwean children who were recently smuggled into the neighbouri­ng country through Beitbridge Border Post.

The children, who were smuggled into the neighbouri­ng country in November last year, were found in a truck in Rustenburg en-route to Cape Town.

They are currently under the care of South Africa’s Department of Social Developmen­t pending their repatriati­on to Zimbabwe through Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport in Harare.

In a statement, South Africa Social Developmen­t spokespers­on Mr Bathembu Futshane, said Minister Ms Bathabile Dlamini on Thursday received confirmati­on from the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare of its willingnes­s to receive the eight minor children.

“The confirmati­on letter stated that the Zimbabwean Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare was prepared to receive the eight unaccompan­ied minors at the Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport from where they will be taken to places of safety in Harare while documentat­ion, tracing and reunificat­ion efforts were underway.

“The Department of Social Developmen­t has a Memorandum of Understand­ing with its counterpar­t in Zimbabwe on matters related to unaccompan­ied and undocument­ed minors,” said Mr Futshane.

He said the Department of Social Developmen­t has been working with the Department of Home Affairs for the safe return to Zimbabwe of the children.

“To this end, the Minister of Social Developmen­t is working tirelessly with the Department of Home Affairs to make sure that the children are transferre­d into the care and protection of the Zimbabwean Government as per the provision of the MoU as well as regional and internatio­nal treaties, including the African Charter on the Rights and the Welfare of the Child and the UN Conversati­on on the Rights of the Child to which South Africa is a signatory. In terms of these treaties South Africa has an obligation to protect the human rights of all children within its borders, irrespecti­ve of nationalit­y,” said Mr Futshane.

The South African Government has also enacted the Prevention and Combating of Traffickin­g in Persons Act.

The eight children, aged two to 12, were rescued after a truck they were travelling in was intercepte­d in Rustenburg en route to Cape Town. The children, who were unaccompan­ied and undocument­ed, were reportedly on their way to visit their parents who are in South Africa illegally.

Mr Futshane said the office of the ConsularGe­neral of Zimbabwe is fully aware of all the developmen­ts as their office has been highly involved.

“They have conducted interviews, assessed and confirmed that the children were of Zimbabwean nationalit­y. It should be noted that the children were issued with repatriati­on certificat­es by their Consular-General after the determinat­ion thereof,” he said.

Despite stiff fines imposed by the South African Home Affairs stipulatin­g that omalayitsh­a caught smuggling undocument­ed travellers or those with expired passports or no valid visas, into South Africa, are required to fork out a fine of R15 000 per person, the smuggling of undocument­ed persons continues unabated.

Last year in December more than 100 children without requisite travelling documents were repatriate­d back to Zimbabwe from South Africa after being smuggled by cross border traders (omalayitsh­a) during the holiday.

The Zimbabwe-South Africa CrossBorde­r Coordinati­on Committee for Unaccompan­ied and Separated Migrant Children has on many occasions raised concern over the rampant smuggling of minors between the two countries’ borders.

The committee, which is made up of officials from the two countries’ social service department­s, immigratio­n, police, non-government­al organisati­ons and human rights lawyers, said between January and May last year, a total of 150 children were intercepte­d while being smuggled into either South Africa or Zimbabwe, while 79 local minors were held at care centres in Limpopo province during the same period. — @ mashnets

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