NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

B/Bridge faces myriad of challenges, Parly told

- BY REX MPHISA

THE Beitbridge Border Post faces a host of administra­tive problems centred around archaic infrastruc­ture which has rendered the facility insecure and vulnerable to security breaches particular­ly this festive season, a parliament­ary committee was recently told.

Two years ago, government awarded Zimborders a tender to upgrade the Beitbridge Border Post where President Emmerson Mnangagwa officiated at the groundbrea­king ceremony, but work has since been abandoned.

Assistant regional immigratio­n officer-in-charge Nqobile Ncube said other problems emanated from administra­tive glitches caused by the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra)’s “big brother” approach, government’s abandonmen­t of the Port Authority Agency, lack of resources and general accommodat­ion problems which have seen 36 families sharing flats meant for just a third of that figure.

“The redevelopm­ent of Beitbridge has brought more problems than solutions. They pulled down our wrought iron fence and erected a weak fence that can easily be vandalised,” Ncube told the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Defence, Immigratio­n and Security during a recent tour of the border post.

“The work that was expected to be completed in two-and-half years has six months of its contract left, but only unfinished preliminar­y work is on the ground. We cannot see them finishing in six months.”

The committee’s acting chairperso­n Callisto Gwanetsa described Ncube’s report as “incisive and shocking”.

“We also admit we have been coming here, but had never approached you to hear of these shocking developmen­ts,” Gwanetsa said.

Ncube said on infrastruc­tural challenges, access control personnel had to bear the brunt of allweather elements at the gates because of poor infrastruc­ture.

“The border redevelopm­ent, through Zimborders seems to be battling to take off as there is still talk of financial closure 10 months after the last date of works commenceme­nt.

“There is a very urgent need to push for the border redevelopm­ent project to take off and be completed as major developmen­ts, including the one-stop-border post project, hinge on this,” Ncube said, adding that the porous border post continued to pose a challenge.

“The 225km frontier has too many breach points and only a good rainy season holds off illicit movement for a long period. (Police and army) forward bases and communitie­s along the frontier line are fuelling cross-border illicit activities,” he said.

Ncube also revealed that the immigratio­n online system had long collapsed resulting in manual clearance of travellers although there was need to adopt technologi­cal tools for reconnaiss­ance and patrol of the frontier to curb illicit activities.

“The Afrosoft-backed system has been down since December last year and this puts the department, security and basically the whole nation at risk as all entries and migrant management has to be done from a manual perspectiv­e despite the high volume movement at this port,” Ncube said.

“I would like to request the committee to lobby for Cabinet or even a presidenti­al oversight into this matter such that by the festive season this year, we trial-run an effective and robust operationa­l system that ideally would be real time, carry on board the Interpol module like DHA and Botswana Immigratio­n Service, be able to carry on board the neo-facial recognitio­n module being currently piloted, among other modules,” he said.

Ncube appealed to the committee to push for the Ports Authority Bill to be enacted as this will align services and result in a fair utilisatio­n of resources across the board.

“The current set up where Zimra, who are also a stakeholde­r at the border, are given the maintenanc­e and repair budget for the whole complex is untenable as obviously most of the expenditur­e will lean towards the interests of Zimra at the expense of other department­s and in the absence of the arbitrator role of the port authority this creates a big brother element in the purse holder and relegates other department­s to minions who have no administra­tive say in the management and developmen­t of infrastruc­ture and services. This, in my view, needs to be dealt with,” he said.

He said like every government department at Beitbridge, his department faced an acute shortage of accommodat­ion, resulting in members sharing accommodat­ion.

Meanwhile, the parliament­ary committee members came faceto-face with uniformed police and soldiers helping illicit immigrants and illegal cross-border shoppers to cross.

 ??  ?? The Beitbridge Border Post immigratio­n hall
The Beitbridge Border Post immigratio­n hall

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