Why South Africa is closing its doors to Zimbabwe migrants | #daitngscams | #lovescams


Petunia Sibanda came to South Africa secretly from Zimbabwe in 2003, crossing the Limpopo River, pretending not to see the crocodiles in the distance. 

She lived in constant fear of her lack of legal status. Then, in 2011, she heard about a special visa for Zimbabweans like her.

Why We Wrote This

Countries around the globe are grappling with migrant inflows. A looming decision by South Africa, the continent’s biggest host, could set the tone across Africa for years to come.

“I could live freely for the first time,” says Ms. Sibanda, whose four children were all born here.

Now, though, the South African government says all 178,000 holders of the so-called Zimbabwe Exemption Permits (ZEP) have until the end of 2022 to get a different visa, or leave the country permanently.

Ms. Sibanda faces an existential question: stay in the country and become undocumented, or return home to still dire conditions? 

South Africa hosts more migrants than any other African country, but amid high poverty and unemployment, anti-immigrant sentiment is often used by political leaders to rally working-class voters, and xenophobic violence flares regularly.

ZEP holders are a tiny fraction of South Africa’s migrant population, which is estimated between 3 million and 4 million people. But the government says kicking them out will ease unemployment and overstrained public services. 

Terminating the ZEP “is an easy way to score points with voters,” says Loren Landau of the University of the Witwatersrand.

When Petunia Sibanda came to South Africa from Zimbabwe in 2003, she arrived the way most people she knew did in those days – late at night, crossing over a dry patch of the Limpopo River that slices the two countries from each other, pretending not to see the crocodiles in the distance. 

For several years, she lived her life in South Africa on the margins, constantly afraid her lack of legal status would be found out and she would be sent back home to a country where the economy was in free fall. 

Then Ms. Sibanda found a lifeline. In 2011, she heard about a special visa for Zimbabweans, which would allow them to live and work in South Africa legally. 

Why We Wrote This

Countries around the globe are grappling with migrant inflows. A looming decision by South Africa, the continent’s biggest host, could set the tone across Africa for years to come.

“I could live freely for the first time,” she says.

But the reprieve was always temporary. Last November, the South African government confirmed that it would no longer renew the 178,000 so-called Zimbabwe Exemption Permits it had issued. All ZEP holders, including Ms. Sibanda, had until the end of 2022 to get a different visa, or leave the country permanently.



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