Discussion:
Crackdown on asylum seekers and illegal immigrants
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Steve Hayes
2011-07-17 10:58:37 UTC
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Johannesburg - South Africa has set the stage for the mass deportation of more
than one million Zimbabwean immigrants later this month in a move that could
alter its status as the world's largest country of refuge.

South Africa has been a beacon for asylum seekers due to liberal immigration
laws, proximity to African trouble spots and massive economy compared to the
rest of the continent that has attracted millions seeking wealth they cannot
find at home.

About one in five of the 845 800 asylum seekers globally in 2010 sought refuge
in South Africa, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

That is nearly double the combined figure for the United States and France,
the world's number two and three countries in terms of asylum applications.

The bulk of asylum seekers are from neighbouring Zimbabwe, which has become an
economic basket case under its entrenched leader Robert

Mugabe, whose Zanu-PF party has been charged by global powers with using
violence and vote fraud to stay in power.

The government said the crackdown on the Zimbabweans is a signal it wants to
get tough on those who use asylum applications to seek work and money.

"Following this project, our intention is to document nationals of other
neighbouring countries," said home affairs spokesperson Ronnie Mamoepa.

South Africa allowed hundreds of thousands from Zimbabwe to enter without
documents about two years ago when its neighbour was swept up in political
violence and its already unsteady economy collapsed under the weight of
hyperinflation.

It set an end of 2010 deadline for the Zimbabweans to apply for proper visas -
with 275 000 filling out paperwork - and said when July ends, it will start
deporting what analysts estimate could be one to two million other Zimbabweans
without proper documents.

Uncertain future

With few staff and a flood of applicants, it can take home affairs months or
even years to process applications, allowing immigrants to stay long enough to
earn mostly modest sums of money to help their families back home.

"As long as regional economic inequalities remain so stark, South Africa will
continue to be a primary (if temporary) destination," said Loren Landau,
director of the African Centre for Migration and Society at the University the
Witwatersrand.

The only problem is that those legitimately seeking political asylum face an
uncertain future, waiting longer in South Africa for a decision than in many
other countries.

A concern for South Africa is that not only are the number of asylum seekers
from neighbouring countries growing, but so are the numbers from further
afield African states including Somalia, Ethiopia and the Democratic Republic
of the Congo.

With unemployment at 25%, the government has faced criticism from its poor for
allowing immigrants into South Africa, where they compete for scarce jobs and
space in shantytowns that have mushroomed in major cities.

Tensions flared about two years ago when attacks on migrants left at least 62
dead and more than 100 000 homeless, rattling the nerves of the government and
investors.

The refugees strain public services but many also take on jobs for which there
are not enough skilled South Africans, or perform work that South Africans do
not want to do.

"I would say that the net result is that the benefit equates to or surpasses
the burden," said James Chapman, a refugee attorney at the University of Cape
Town Law Clinic.

The government, concerned about the influx, is planning to tighten its borders
and expel those who stay illegally.

"The issue here is not about too many asylum seekers, per se. Rather, it's
about a migration management regime that is ill-suited to South Africa's
regional position," Landau said.

http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/Politics/SA-begins-shutting-doors-to-rest-of-Africa-20110715
NoHtmlMailsPlease
2011-07-23 07:00:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Steve Hayes
Johannesburg - South Africa has set the stage for the mass deportation of more
than one million Zimbabwean immigrants later this month in a move that could
alter its status as the world's largest country of refuge.
Yes, I doubt that many people know that important fact, which by
increasing the ratio of unskilled to skilled workers, increases the
corresponding remuneration rate. And ellieviates [sp] the shortage
of those who can at least read and write [since ALL african states have
a better educational system than current-SA.
Post by Steve Hayes
South Africa has been a beacon for asylum seekers due to liberal immigration
laws, proximity to African trouble spots and massive economy compared to the
rest of the continent that has attracted millions seeking wealth they cannot
find at home.
SA is a flight-destination because the remaining mzungus who haven't
yet been driven out [BBC was telling how at early independance , Morroco
tried, for economic reasons, to prevent their Jews from leaving] enable the
muntu to have a better economic life than
elsewhere in Africa, where all the mzungus HAVE left.
Post by Steve Hayes
About one in five of the 845 800 asylum seekers globally in 2010 sought refuge
in South Africa, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.
That is nearly double the combined figure for the United States and France,
the world's number two and three countries in terms of asylum
applications.
These are staggering statistics, and journos who just repeat from
each other, without an original thought, never mention that SA's
GDP [but not GDP percapita] is temporarily boosted by the population
import and especially that 'already schooled' persons are imported.
Post by Steve Hayes
The bulk of asylum seekers are from neighbouring Zimbabwe, which has become an
economic basket case under its entrenched leader Robert
Mugabe, whose Zanu-PF party has been charged by global powers with using
violence and vote fraud to stay in power.
The implication that 'getting rid of Mubgabe will solve the global
negroid problem, including Haiti', is SO absurd.
Post by Steve Hayes
The government said the crackdown on the Zimbabweans is a signal it wants to
get tough on those who use asylum applications to seek work and money.
"Following this project, our intention is to document nationals of other
neighbouring countries," said home affairs spokesperson Ronnie Mamoepa.
South Africa allowed hundreds of thousands from Zimbabwe to enter without
documents about two years ago when its neighbour was swept up in political
violence and its already unsteady economy collapsed under the weight of
hyperinflation.
Saying the "economy collapsed" is peecee-talk like saying "war
broke out": like 'a tsunami was caused by God'.
Post by Steve Hayes
It set an end of 2010 deadline for the Zimbabweans to apply for proper visas -
with 275 000 filling out paperwork - and said when July ends, it will start
deporting what analysts estimate could be one to two million other Zimbabweans
without proper documents.
Uncertain future
With few staff and a flood of applicants, it can take home affairs months or
even years to process applications, allowing immigrants to stay long enough to
earn mostly modest sums of money to help their families back home.
"As long as regional economic inequalities remain so stark, South Africa will
continue to be a primary (if temporary) destination," said Loren Landau,
director of the African Centre for Migration and Society at the University the
Witwatersrand.
These peecee-clowns should be replaced by 'some one who could
do sums at school', and went on to learn econ101, that the relative
scarcity is exactly WHAT causes its increased price, which in turn
causes its increased production, which in turn elleviates [sp] the
original higher price.
Post by Steve Hayes
The only problem is that those legitimately seeking political asylum face an
uncertain future, waiting longer in South Africa for a decision than in many
other countries.
A concern for South Africa is that not only are the number of asylum seekers
from neighbouring countries growing, but so are the numbers from further
afield African states including Somalia, Ethiopia and the Democratic Republic
of the Congo.
With unemployment at 25%, the government has faced criticism from its poor for
allowing immigrants into South Africa, where they compete for scarce jobs and
space in shantytowns that have mushroomed in major cities.
Tensions flared about two years ago when attacks on migrants left at least 62
dead and more than 100 000 homeless, rattling the nerves of the government and
investors.
The refugees strain public services but many also take on jobs for which there
are not enough skilled South Africans, or perform work that South Africans do
not want to do.
"I would say that the net result is that the benefit equates to or surpasses
the burden," said James Chapman, a refugee attorney at the University of Cape
Town Law Clinic.
The government, concerned about the influx, is planning to tighten its borders
and expel those who stay illegally.
"The issue here is not about too many asylum seekers, per se. Rather, it's
about a migration management regime that is ill-suited to South Africa's
regional position," Landau said.
http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/Politics/SA-begins-shutting-doors-to-rest-of-Africa-20110715
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