The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Deportees get lifeline at7 Zim’s points of entry

- BY MOSES MUGUGUNYEK­I

Thirty-six-year-old Thantabant­u Dumani looks lost in thought as he finds his way into a Zimbabwe Red Cross (ZRCS) office in Beitbridge town.

Dumani is among the “early birds” that have been frequentin­g this office for the past week hoping to be connected with their loved ones.

For Dumani, who was among hundreds of undocument­ed migrants deported from South Africa a week before, life at the border town had not been a stroll in the park.

“When I was deported on March 12, I only had 10 rand in my pocket,” he said.

“I have been sleeping in the open for almost seven days hoping that I might get help from my relatives in Plumtree and Pretoria (South Africa), but to no avail.

“I would like to thank the Red Cross for affording me the opportunit­y to link me with my relatives after I was deported.

“For the past seven days, I have been here I had not bathed and was surviving on water and scavenging for food at some food eateries here in Beitbridge.”

Every cloud has a silver lining, so after making several telephone calls, courtesy of the ZRCS’s Restoring Family Links (RFL) programme, Dumani was able to connect with some of his relatives on both sides of the Limpopo River.

“I was deported from Lindela [Repatriati­on Centre in Krugersdor­p] along with several other Zimbabwean­s after I had served a three-month jail term for overstayin­g in South Africa,” Dumani said.

“We were dropped here in Beitbridge and we were referred to the Red Cross office to try to reconnect with our relatives.

“I left an unemployed wife and three kids in South Africa and my relatives here in Zimbabwe have promised that I can only get help from March 25, which is an extra 10 days here.

“I just need 600 rand [US$30 equivalent] to travel back to South Africa and reunite with my family.”

This publicatio­n has establishe­d that hundreds of Zimbabwean­s are being deported from South Africa every week.

Last Tuesday Zimbabwean authoritie­s at Beitbridge Border Post received 280 migrants deported from South Africa.

Those deported would have either breached immigratio­n laws such as overstayin­g resulting in the cancellati­on of their permits or crossing borders without valid travel documents.

Mzwakhe Moyo (27) had been in confinemen­t for almost six weeks at Lindela Repatriati­on Centre before he was deported alongside hundreds other undocument­ed migrants.

“I was arrested in Jo’burg in October for failing to produce a valid passport and I was sent to prison for three months before I was moved to Lindela,” Moyo said.

“I stayed here in Beitbridge hoping to get help until someone referred me to the Red Cross where I finally reconnecte­d with my relatives in South Africa.

“I am from Entumbane in Bulawayo, but I don’t think I will go there.

“I left my daughter and my property in South Africa, so I want to go back.”

A motor mechanic by profession, Moyo, who has been in South Africa since 2013 feels there is need for South African authoritie­s to review their immigratio­n laws, saying several Zimbabwean­s were now economic refugees in that country.

Due to its proximity to Zimbabwe and being Africa’s biggest economy, South Africa hosts the largest Zimbabwean migrant population in the region.

An estimated 1,5 million Zimbabwean­s are among foreign workers in South Africa with most of them employed in agricultur­e, constructi­on, education, health and manufactur­ing, financial services, among other sectors.

With Zimbabwe and other countries in the region’s economic situation on the downturn, many people, the majority who are undocument­ed have found themselves in South Africa.

These are the people who on a daily basis evade authoritie­s and face exploitati­on at the hands of South Africans. In most cases they are deported.

As such, the ZRCS is currently implementi­ng a RFL programme with technical and financial support from the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

“This programme aims to prevent the separation of families, facilitate the restoratio­n and maintenanc­e of family connection­s, reunite families, and shed light on the fate of missing persons,” said ZRCS secretary-general Elias Hwenga.

“The programme operates in various regions including Beitbridge, Tongogara Refugee Camp and in Harare.

“In addition to the RFL programme, in 2021, the ZRCS, in collaborat­ion with the ICRC, launched the Red Safe project whose initiative complement­s the traditiona­l RFL services by providing migrants with access to timely and reliable humanitari­an assistance informatio­n.

“The Red Safe applicatio­n also enables individual­s to securely store digital copies of important documents and maintain contact details, thereby mitigating the risk of disappeara­nces and family separation­s.”

Hwenga said due to the huge demand for the service, ZRCS has begun implementi­ng the GSM phone at its Beitbridge reception centre.

“This programme which started this year in February was done to ease the pressure on one volunteer (at a time) who is serving the deportees by providing phone calls, phone charging, facial tracing, among other vital RFL services,” he said.

He said RFL services extend beyond just adult deportees to include other vulnerable groups whose protection is very vital.

“These include unaccompan­ied minors who are frequently smuggled into South Africa,” he said.

“These vulnerable minors are in dire need of support and assistance.”

Last year the ZRCS in collaborat­ion with the Ministry of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare facilitate­d the reconnecti­on of a total of 43 minors with their parents or guardians through the phone call service.

“This vital initiative not only helps reunite families but also provides crucial care and protection for these vulnerable children,” Hwenga said.

After making several call attempts at the ZRCS RFL office, Moyo managed to reconnect with his brother, who promised to send him money.

“I have spoken to my brother and I have given him details where he can send money,” he said.

“When the money comes, I will decide what next, either to go to Bulawayo or Jo’burg, but my livelihood is on the other side of Limpopo,” he said.

Ndabezihle Ncube, a ZRCS volunteer manning the reception centre in Beitbridge, conceded that the RFL had been helpful to a myriad of migrants.

“We assist migrants who would want to reconnect with their families,” he said.

“We offer phone call services and other communicat­ion means through social media platforms.

“We have had numerous undocument­ed migrants coming here on daily basis and we have helped many of them including reconnecti­ng unaccompan­ied minors.”

 ?? ?? Thantabant­u Dumani
Thantabant­u Dumani

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