News Articles

Home Affairs taking nine months to process permits for Zimbabweans

Source: Groundup, 14/09/2018


Some Zimbabweans who applied last year are still waiting as September
deadline looms for ZEP permits
Morgan (surname withheld) applied on 7 December 2017 for a Zimbabwe
Exemption Permit. She has been tracking her application online. “Up to
now nothing new, almost nine months after submission,” she said.
Photo: Brent Meersman
Some Zimbabweans who have applied for their Zimbabwe Exemption Permits
(ZEP) are anxious about the slow progress processing their permits.
Without a valid permit to show they find their bank accounts frozen,
face difficulties registering their children at educational
institutions and even lose their jobs.
The ZEP replaces the ZSP (Zimbabwean Special Permit) which expired in
December 2017. Home Affairs issued a circular to banks, employers and
learning institutions in December that as long as people could show
proof of application for the ZEP they should continue to receive
services while their application is being adjudicated. However,
GroundUp is aware of a number of cases where banks, schools and
employers have not heeded this advisory.
Applications for the ZEP opened on 15 September 2017 and the closing
date (extended twice) was 15 February 2018.
On 31 January, Home Affairs announced that the ZEP process, including
finalising adjudications and issuing all new permits, would be
completed by the end of September 2018.
But on 6 September, Home Affairs media manager David Hlabane said in
an email response to GroundUp that the department is currently
adjudicating applications that were received before the closing date
and the process should be completed around October.
GroundUp has been trying every day since Monday to get an answer from
Home Affairs as to how many applications have been successfully
processed, but without success.
Morgan (surname withheld) applied on 7 December 2017. She has been
tracking her application online. “Up to now nothing new, almost nine
months after submission,” she said.
Cindy (surname withheld) told GroundUp in an email: “I submitted my
paperwork in January and still nothing.” She says she was suspended
from work six weeks ago. Her employer wants her to show a valid
permit. She did provide proof of application and showed the receipt,
but she says her employer wasn’t satisfied.
A Zimbabwean man, who also wished to remain anonymous, said he
submitted a ZEP study permit for his daughter in February but he only
got an SMS notification that his daughter’s application was received
by Home Affairs on 24 August. He said his Capitec bank account has
been frozen.
Helen (surname withheld) is worried that she may not get her wages
this week after FNB froze her account in December last year. Her
employer has been paying her in cash but says the company cannot
continue to do that.
The ZEP Dispensation Forum on Facebook is encouraging Zimbabweans not
to merely check online but to actually visit the offices of Visa
Facilitation Centre (VFS), the company that processes the permits for
Home Affairs. The page has posts from people who applied in November
2017 and have not yet received their ZEPs and from people who have
been struggling without documentation.
Most Zimbabweans in South Africa have been uncertain about their
future in the country since the inception of the Dispensation of
Zimbabwean Permit (DZP) in 2010. About 245,000 DZPs were issued. It
was valid for four years and was supposed to be non-renewable. It was
later extended to three years and renamed the ZSP in 2014. Just under
200,000 ZSP permits were issued. Again in December 2016, Home Affairs
said there would be no renewal of the ZSP, but it created the ZEP in
2017, valid for four years.
On the ZEP it states that the document “doesn’t allow the holder to
apply for permanent residence irrespective of the period of stay in
South Africa. ZEP will not be renewable and the holder cannot change
conditions of the permit in SA”.


Search
South Africa Immigration Company