JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, June 28, 2008

South Africa Deports Zimbabwean Refugees

Aid Group Says 450 Who Fled Election Violence Were Sent Back Across Border

  • A woman shows her ink stained finger after voting in the country's presidential election, in Harare, Zimbabwe, Friday, June 27, 2008. Hundreds who fled to South Africa to escape the violence and intimidation marking the runoff vote were sent back by South Africa authorities. Photo

    A woman shows her ink stained finger after voting in the country's presidential election, in Harare, Zimbabwe, Friday, June 27, 2008. Hundreds who fled to South Africa to escape the violence and intimidation marking the runoff vote were sent back by South Africa authorities.  (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)

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(AP)  South Africa deported some 450 Zimbabweans overnight from a border detention center to a homeland beset by political violence and uncertainty, an international aid group said Saturday.

Medecins Sans Frontieres said one of its teams visited the center on Friday - the day a widely criticized presidential runoff was held in Zimbabwe - and found more than 450 men, women and children there saying they had crossed the border in recent days, "fleeing instability and political violence."

When the aid team returned Saturday with supplies, it found the center empty the agency said in a statement. It said South African authorities had confirmed all the Zimbabweans were sent back.

"Hundreds of people have been sent back into the country from which they fled, without any recognition of their right to seek asylum," said Rachel Cohen, head of Medecins Sans Frontieres in South Africa. She said the deportations were "unacceptable" and "in violation of international as well as South African law, which guarantee the right to seek asylum."

Siobhan McCarthy, a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Home Affairs, told The Associated Press on Saturday that foreigners caught at the border are screened to determine their status.

"I don't know the particulars of this case, my assumption would be that they would be in the country illegally and do not qualify for refugee status and therefore were returned to Zimbabwe," McCarthy said.

As many as 3 million Zimbabweans are in South Africa. Some have been here for years, and many come and go regularly. Some work in South Africa for weeks or months between visits home, while others come on day trips to buy goods scarce in their economically ravaged country.

South Africa views most Zimbabweans crossing its border as economic migrants, not refugees. Few apply for asylum, in part because that could make it difficult to return.

"Everybody who comes into the country is allowed to seek asylum, but the majority of the people crossing the border from Zimbabwe into South Africa, they do not qualify for refugee status and it is on that basis that many of the applications for asylum have been turned down," McCarthy said.

But she said South Africa was reviewing its policy of sending economic migrants home, mindful that powerful forces spur Zimbabweans and others to come to the region's economic hub.

"The minister has said that these deportations are a fruitless exercise because people are entering the country faster than we can deport them, and by the time we deport some they just find their way back into the country again."

Zimbabweans were targeted in recent xenophobic attacks by South Africans who claim foreigners are stealing jobs and using scarce resources.

Human Rights Watch said this month that the high number of Zimbabweans in South Africa underlines a "failure of foreign policy."

South African President Thabo Mbeki's attempts to mediate between Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and the Zimbabwean opposition are increasingly seen as failed. Mbeki has refused to publicly criticize Mugabe, who is accused of trampling human rights and ruining the economy of what had been the region's breadbasket.

In Zimbabwe on Friday, people said they were forced to vote in a presidential runoff in which Mugabe was the only candidate. The opposition candidate had withdrawn, citing an onslaught of state-sponsored attacks on his supporters.

Mugabe was expected to claim victory. Opposition candidate Morgan Tsvangirai won the first round but, according to the official results, not enough votes to avoid a runoff.

Friday's election was widely condemned by African and other world leaders as a sham that would only intensify Zimbabwe's political crisis and further delay attempts to address its economic collapse.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Add a Comment
by rowdywicca June 28, 2008 3:23 PM PDT
The minister has said that these deportations are a fruitless exercise because people are entering the country faster than we can deport them, and by the time we deport some they just find their way back into the country again."

Wow! Sounds familiar!
Reply to this comment
by kennedy7955 June 28, 2008 7:16 PM PDT
Yeah, send them home but not without the means to protect themselves. Give them the guns and supplies they need to fight Mugabe...
Reply to this comment
by adfolder June 28, 2008 9:04 PM PDT
Deport them to America. Bring them here, and let them live off the Good-Ole'' American taxpayer! Why not, everybody else does!!!!
Reply to this comment
by agnim June 29, 2008 2:43 AM PDT
Why is the European-dominated UN not calling for sanctions on US & allies for UNPROVOKED invasion & MASS MURDER of hundreds of thousands in Iraq?

Yet there is call for sanction on Myanmar, Cuba, Zimbabwe, etc that are relatively upstanding countries?
A beastly lack of virtue and patented RACISM!
Reply to this comment
by mandydryer June 29, 2008 3:28 PM PDT
Join "Americans against South Africa" www.theseriouspolice.com
Reply to this comment
by keithle1 June 29, 2008 5:28 PM PDT
How can Black Africans do that to other Black Africans? What happened to black unity?

The white man is the devil. The evil pink people. The colonial oppressors.

The Black man is the noble angel. EVERYTHING bad that happens in Africa from now til the end of time is the white man''s fault!

Sarcasm alert. :-)
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