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From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 5:48 PM
Subject: ANALYSIS: Mixed responses to mixed migration in Africa
To: Jean-Francois Darcq <[email protected]>


ANALYSIS: Mixed responses to mixed migration in Africa

JOHANNESBURG, 28 September 2011 (IRIN) - Abdul worked as a journalist
in Somalia before death threats from Al-Shabab militia drove him to
leave his native country and head for Mozambique where friends told
him he would receive help at Maratane refugee camp in Nampula
Province.

 The boat he boarded in Mombasa had 110 other passengers - some
Somalis with stories similar to his own, and others Ethiopians, either
fleeing their own armed conflicts or drought or both - all crammed
together in one vessel by a smuggler aiming to maximize profits.

 Now Abdul and his fellow passengers are all being detained in the
same prison in southern Tanzania. Neither the Mozambican police who
arrested them in the northern town of Palma and then violently
deported them to the Tanzanian border, nor the immigration officials
who found them there - naked and stripped of all their belongings -
attempted to determine which of the migrants were asylum-seekers
entitled to receive protection and assistance, and which were economic
migrants subject to immigration laws.

 Countries like Tanzania are starting to realize that their
immigration laws are not adequate to deal with the phenomenon of
"mixed migration" whereby refugees, asylum-seekers, economic migrants
and even victims of human trafficking may be using the same routes,
means of transport and smuggling networks to reach a shared
destination, but are driven by different motives and have different
claims to protection and humanitarian assistance.

 "It has become incredibly difficult to distinguish between different
streams of migrants," commented Vincent William, programme manager for
the Southern African Migration Programme at the South Africa-based
Institute for Democracy in Africa (IDASA). "There's just a lot of
uncertainty about how to manage mixed flows and concerns about not
allowing people to abuse the asylum system."

 While much of this movement is originating from the Horn of Africa,
the cycle of violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has
also generated large numbers of refugees as well as those simply
seeking better employment and educational opportunities.

 Meanwhile, Zimbabwe's complex and inter-linked political, social and
economic crises of recent years have created the region's largest
cross-border movement with recipient countries struggling to
distinguish between those fleeing political persecution, those in
search of a livelihood and those driven by a combination of factors.

 For many the preferred destination is South Africa, the country that
not only offers the best prospects for employment, but also has the
region's most progressive refugee laws. While there are few legal
channels for unskilled migrants to enter South Africa, foreign
nationals who apply for asylum can remain in the country for as long
as it takes to process their claim and during that time they enjoy
freedom of movement and the right to work. The result is an asylum
system that has been overwhelmed by more applications than any other
in the world, according the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR).

 Roni Amit, a researcher at the African Centre for Migration and
Society at Witwatersrand University in Johannesburg, said South
Africa's Department of Home Affairs has dealt with the backlog of
asylum applications mainly by rejecting more people. "The rejection
rate is now something like 96 percent," she told IRIN. "Decisions are
very cut and pasted and not really individualized."

 Business booming for smugglers

 Under the UN Refugee Convention, refugees are defined as individuals
who are forced to remain outside their country of origin because of a
well-founded fear of persecution. The Organization of African Unity
(now renamed the African Union) definition is slightly broader and
includes people compelled to leave their country due to "events
seriously disturbing public order".

 Most countries rely on the UN definition, but in countries like
Tanzania, immigration officials lack the training or the resources to
screen large groups of migrants.

 "Every migrant is treated like a criminal so the same treatment is
given to the migrants and their smuggler," said Monica Peruffo of the
International Organization for Migration (IOM), which recently
conducted an assessment of Tanzania's immigration procedures and
facilities.

 The job of immigration officials is not made easier by the fact that
migrants like Abdul, who have genuine claims to asylum, often delay
applying for it until they have reached their chosen destination. Not
only does this make them vulnerable to being treated as illegal
immigrants in the countries they travel through, it can also harm
their chances of being admitted to South Africa. In recent months,
South African border officials have started denying entry to
asylum-seekers based on the principle that they should have sought
asylum in the first safe country they reached. Although no such
principle exists in international or domestic law, it has not
prevented South Africa from using it as a basis to turn away
asylum-seekers from the Horn of Africa [
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=93403 ].

 "If you try to enter through an official border post and you're
denied entry, then your next step is to enter the country illegally
and that's where smugglers come in," said Witwatersrand University's
Amit.

 Sheik Amil of the Somali Community Board, which represents the
interests of Somalis in South Africa, confirmed that business was
flourishing for smugglers who charge up to US$3,000 to bring Somalis
to South Africa from Kenya, where many begin their journeys at the
refugee camps near the border.

 "They have to get half the money before they leave and the other half
when they arrive," said Amil, adding that migrants who failed to come
up with the second instalment were often held hostage by their
smugglers until a friend or relative produced the cash.

 Others have paid with their lives. An unknown number of Horn migrants
have died at sea with the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) reporting that 11
asylum-seekers drowned off the coast of Mozambique in January 2011
alone, while eight suffocated aboard a closed container truck driving
from Maratane to South Africa in February.

 Governments "increasingly paranoid"

 In September 2010, Tanzania hosted a regional conference on the issue
of mixed and irregular migration. Delegates from government and civil
society talked about the need to respect the human rights of all
migrants, regardless of their legal status and broaden legal migration
channels to reduce dependence on smugglers and illegal border
crossings. The meeting ended with calls for greater regional
cooperation on migration issues, improved national laws and policies
to deal with mixed migration, and better border management.

 But in the last year, little has been done to implement the
conference's recommendations. While UNHCR and IOM have continued to
advocate putting in place more protective measures, such as
constructing refugee reception centres at border posts where proper
screening of migrants could take place, and replacing forced
deportations with voluntary return programmes, governments tend to
view the irregular movement of large groups of migrants through their
countries as a threat to national security and have responded by
detaining and deporting them. [
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=93759 ]

 Horn migrants who do make it to refugee camps in Mozambique, Malawi
and Zimbabwe, often use them as a place to rest and regroup before
continuing their journey to South Africa, a practice that has
heightened concerns about security and abuses of the asylum system.

 "Governments have become increasingly paranoid and it does lead to a
situation where genuine asylum-seekers are excluded because of the
actions of non-asylum seekers," said IDASA's William, adding that
"worries about foreigners taking jobs" often formed a backdrop to such
concerns.

 In March of this year, South Africa passed amendments to its
immigration legislation [
http://irinnews.org/printreport.aspx?reportid=92286 ] that decreased
the amount of time asylum-seekers have to make a formal application
for asylum after entering the country, and increased the penalties for
those found guilty of violating immigration laws.

 "They don't really seem to have a policy perspective that provides a
rational justification [for the amendments]," said Witwatersrand
University's Amit. "There's just a general perception that there are
too many people entering the country and taking jobs."

 A Southern African Development Community (SADC) protocol to
facilitate the movement of persons has the potential to reduce
irregular migration by creating more possibilities for legal
migration, at least within the region, but has stalled since being
adopted in 2005. For the protocol to come into effect, nine of SADC's
15 member states have to ratify it but so far only five have done so
and no implementation plan has been developed.

 The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the Common
Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) have agreed in
principle on similar protocols but William said progress on
implementation had been very slow.

 "There's concern about potential security risks, but the overriding
concern is probably the economic one. There's a perception that
migrants will flow to countries with the biggest economies."

 ks/cb[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93844



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