Rights Group Denounces Closing Zimbabwe Refugee Center

doctors__without_borders.jpgUS actor Matt Damon visits the S. African border town of Musina to draw attention to the plight of Zimbabweans, 03 Mar 2009
A humanitarian group caring for Zimbabwean refugees in South Africa is protesting the closure of a major registration camp in South Africa.

The Doctors Without Borders charity denounced the sudden closure of the
South African government’s refugee registration center in Musina, near
the border with Zimbabwe.

The group’s program director for South Africa, Jonathan Whittall, called the move unacceptable.

"We think it is going to increase the health risks facing Zimbabweans
in South Africa. We know from experience that Zimbabweans go into
hiding when they are at risk of deportation," said Whittall. "They have
come to South Africa to seek refuge and the threat of deportation
certainly increases their fear. So we are extremely concerned of the
medical consequences."

Humanitarian workers at the center, located on the city’s fair grounds,
said authorities Tuesday ordered the estimated 4,000 residents to burn
their shelters and leave the grounds.

They also divided residents into different groups according to legal
status, gender and age. Women with children and hundreds of
unaccompanied children were removed from special locations that had
been set up for their protection.

Doctors Without Borders said it had been providing health care to some
2,000 refugees at the center, many of whom were seeking treatment for
cholera, malaria, HIV/AIDS and other diseases.

About 60,000 refugees had applied for asylum at the center since it was
set up eight months ago. Many refugees, once they received their
documents, had moved further into South Africa seeking work on farms or
in major urban centers.

But the government was unhappy with the center which had become a magnet for refugees and where living conditions were poor.

zimbabweans_makeshift_homes.jpgZimbabweans rest in there makeshift homes at show grounds in Musina, 17 Dec 2008

The South African government believes most of the estimated three
million Zimbabweans in the country have come looking for jobs and are
not fleeing political persecution.

As a result most asylum applications are turned down, making the refugees vulnerable once again to deportation.

But Whittall says the South African government has clear legal
responsibilities under its constitution and under international law.

"And our position as MSF is that deportations should stop and that
adequate legal status in whatever form, some protective legal status,
needs to be granted to Zimbabweans so they are not at threat of
deportation so they can come forward and receive the assistance they so
desperately need," said Whittall.

He acknowledges conditions at the camp were deplorable, with people
sleeping in the open or under plastic sheets with little food, clean
water or sanitation.

But he says the task of helping such people when they are in hiding is
much more difficult and places them at greater risk of abuse and
exploitation. 

 

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