News Articles

Revamped refugee centre brings hopes of better service

Source: News24, 17/02/2017


Pretoria â€" Every day scores of asylum seekers camp at the doorsteps of
the Marabastad refugee reception centre in Pretoria, in pursuit of
bona fide documentation to remain in the country.


These foreigners throng the entrance clutching paperwork that includes
identification documents from their country of origin, travel
documents, non-renewable asylum transit permits (for those applying
for the first time, also called section 23 permit), or section 22
permit for those who are renewing their existing documentation.


Clarah Rwenhamo, an asylum seeker from Zimbabwe, says officials put
boxes near the fence for them to place their applications inside. The
boxes get taken inside.


“When they come back, they come with papers with our names on them and
we’d all go to the boxes in big numbers, everyone looking for their
documents all mixed up in one place.”


What follows is a scrum, with shoving, bumping and smashing, to get to
their papers.


Lynnette Kamudyariwa, also from Zimbabwe, says thieves take advantage
of the chaos to steal cellphones, money, and documents.


“By the time you leave here, most of the time, you won’t be having all
of your stuff you came with.”


On two occasions Rwenhamo was unable to get into the centre.


“We were made to stay outside, and we were told if you force your way
in, you’d be caught and deported back to your country. It was very
hard. There were too many tsotsis (thieves) and just people in
general.”


Some foreigners never get their asylum documents because they
disappear somewhere inside the building. The bureaucratic nightmare of
trying to get documents forces people to put their lives on hold.



“Sometimes you spend the whole day here without food and at the end
they tell you that the system is down, so you have to come back some
other day,” says Kamudyariwa.


“You come back tomorrow. It’s the same thing. Then you have to come
back the following week because they work only Monday and Tuesday,”
she says.


High influx
She had to abandon her daily commitments because her livelihood
depended on her asylum documentation.


Last year, President Jacob Zuma visited the centre and heard
complaints from refugees. Problems included lack of staff, slow
information technology, inadequate filling systems, and poor
management, he said at the launch of a revamped centre on Friday
afternoon.


There were allegations of corruption, long queues, overcrowding, and
criminal syndicates.


Now public areas have been refurbished, there’s electric fencing, and
an automated booking system.


“What I really want them to change is the service that we are getting
here and our asylum papers as well, so we can be able to open bank
accounts,” says Kamudyariwa.


South Africa is one of the top 10 countries in the world receiving
asylum seekers. They are mainly from Somalia, Ethiopia, Nigeria,
Zimbabwe, Malawi, Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, and Ghana.



In 2008, the country received over 150 000 applications, a number that
has now decreased to 60 000.


“This influx is still high and remains a challenge even to economic
realities that South Africa faces as a developing country,” Zuma said
on Friday.


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