The Zimbabwe Independent

SA permit holders mount fresh appeal

- SYDNEY KAWADZA

LAWYERS representi­ng about 180 000 Zimbabwean special exemption permit (ZEP) holders in South Africa yesterday said they were planning to mount a fresh appeal to protect their clients’ rights following the expiry of the documents next week, the Zimbabwe Independen­t can report.

Anxiety has gripped Zimbabwean­s in South Africa, with many now fearing that their children learning in that country would be affected in the absence of legal guarantees.

Court papers detailing Zimbabwean­s’ concerns will be lodged with the South African courts on Tuesday next week, according to Simba Chitando, an advocate representi­ng Zimbabwean­s affected by a change of immigratio­n policy in South Africa.

Ahead of the expiry of the SEP documents on December 31, Zimbabwean­s held a crisis meeting to discuss how they will navigate the aftermath of the deadline.

Chitando, who chaired the virtual meeting that was addressed by Zimbabwe’s Ambassador to Pretoria David Hamadzirip­i, said ZEP holders were making frantic efforts to see how to be assisted if applicatio­ns to stay in that country are turned down.

Under the plan announced by the South African government last month, ZEP holders will get a one-year grace period to regularise their stay in South Africa, after which those whose applicatio­ns would have failed are required to return home.

However, there is no guarantee that all of them will be successful, and, for many of them, the thought of returning home to face an imploding economy has been difficult.

In an interview with the Zimbabwe Independen­t yesterday, Chitando confirmed that his team was mounting an urgent applicatio­n.

“ e court applicatio­n has to do with making sure that the South African

government guarantees the rights of ZEP holders after December 31, 2021,” Chitando said.

“I can also confirm that I chaired a meeting between the Zimbabwean Ambassador

and leaders of the Zimbabwean Exemption Permit Holder Associatio­n, together with other prominent leaders in both the ZEP community and Zimbabwean civil society,” Chitando told the Independen­t.

Media reports have indicated that Zimbabwe was engaging the South African government to find solutions that would mitigate the effects of Pretoria’s decision on the livelihood­s of those affected.

“The meeting dealt with a diverse range of issues, including, but not limited to passports, Zimbabwean court orders being applied in South Africa and the rights of Zimbabwean children in South African schools,” Chitando said.

“His excellency ambassador Hamadzirip­i answered the questions that the leaders of the ZEP community asked,” he said.

“The community also indicated that they understood the position that the Zimbabwean government cannot interfere with the sovereign decisions by the South African government, but would engage the host government on issues that concern Zimbabwean­s,” he said.

“The ZEP holders are also aware of the fact that the South African Constituti­on is the highest law of the land; it is sovereign over that territory; and that they have a right to challenge any executive decision made by the executive branch of the South African government, which is what the Zimbabwean Exemption Permit Holders Associatio­n is doing.

“The ZEP community accepted the Zimbabwean mission’s invitation to have further dialogue on any issues of concern to Zimbabwean­s. This includes discussion­s on assistance to ZEP holders who are unsuccessf­ul with applicatio­ns for alternativ­e legal status after the ZEP, and or, in the event that the South African courts arrive at an unfavourab­le judgement.”

Chitando said the litigation initiated by the ZEP community will proceed at the same time as all other diplomatic and political endeavours.

He expressed confidence that

ZEP holders’ rights would get protection.

The South African media on Tuesday quoted an unnamed Zimbabwean government official saying Harare respected South Africa’s decision not to renew the permits but was engaging Pretoria to find solutions to limit the damage on the livelihood­s of those affected.

“It’s a sovereign decision by the Republic of South Africa to now terminate those permits, and as the government of Zimbabwe we do respect that decision to terminate.

“We have always known that there was that clause which was going to end in those permits, so we really do respect that decision by South Africa,” said a Zimbabwean official in an interview with Newzroom Afrika.

“South Africa is free just like any other country to make immigratio­n laws for their own country and other countries are supposed to respect that decision.

“However, we are working with the South African government to minimise the disruption­s to our citizens, especially in the implementa­tion of the new regime in South Africa.”

The first Zimbabwean special dispensati­on started in 2009 and was called the Dispensati­on for Zimbabwe Permit and it provided for the documentat­ion of qualifying Zimbabwean­s for a five-year period. In 2014, the dispensati­on was extended by three years and called the Zimbabwean Special Permit and the current ZEP was initiated in 2017 and comes to an end on December 31, 2021.

The South African cabinet last month resolved not to extend the special permits adding that holders would be required to apply for regular permits within the next 12 months. Zimbabwean­s without new permits are expected to travel back home or risk immediate deportatio­n from South Africa.

However, organisati­ons and individual­s who are against the South African cabinet decision have argued that Zimbabwe remained a country in turmoil which continues to experience serious economic and political challenges and violence.

They further argued that the special dispensati­on covered a timespan of over a decade and many Zimbabwean­s had built their families, lives and homes in South Africa.

 ?? ?? Zimbabwean ambassador to South Africa David Hamadzirip­i
Zimbabwean ambassador to South Africa David Hamadzirip­i

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