| June 23, 2008 Tens
of thousands of foreign nationals displaced by South Africa's wave
of xenophobic violence have returned to their home countries but
those left behind, scared and robbed of every possession, are
reluctant to go along with government plans to resettle them into
the communities that drove them out.
Sarah, 29, a Ghanaian hairdresser whose
business in Khayelitsha township, on the outskirts of Cape Town in
Western Cape Province, was destroyed in the attacks, is one of the
lucky ones: she still has some savings, a family willing to help and
a safe country to go home to.
"Last week I decided to buy things and start
again," she said. But her return to Khayelitsha would not be for
good; "I have to work hard so I can get money and go home to Ghana."
She will follow the thousands who have left
South Africa because they could, since the violence peaked in late
May. According to the Mozambican national disaster management agency
(INGC), over 40,000 Mozambicans had returned by mid June 2008.
But for most of the people that Sarah will
leave behind in the 65 makeshift shelters throughout the Western
Cape, where over half the 14,647 still displaced in South Africa
have found refuge, repatriation is not an option.
Nothing to go back to
Having already fled appalling conditions at
home - like the ongoing violence in Zimbabwe and Somalia, and to a
lesser extent DRC and Burundi - and with no means left to restart a
life in South Africa, the sense of hopelessness in the shelters is
overwhelming.
"Considering what is happening at home in
Zimbabwe, I prefer to stay here," said Qhawe Khumalo, living at the
Site B Community Hall in Khayelitsha.
Most of those in the shelters, like Khumalo,
who lost his home and little shop, said they had nothing left after
the attacks. "They took everything, the zincs [corrugated iron
sheets used for roofing], everything. So even if I want to go back,
there's nothing to go to, we'd have to start from scratch. So we're
left with no options - there's nowhere to go," he told IRIN.
But, unappealing as it may sound,
reintegration is the only next step. The South African government
has made it abundantly clear that the shelters are temporary and
that foreign nationals will be expected to reintegrate with local
communities.
"The problems that took us from Somalia are
only getting worse. We have no other place to go. The South African
government is telling us that it will do everything to reintegrate
us," Mohammed Osman Jama, head of the Somali Community Board (SCB)
of the Western Cape, told IRIN.
This will be no easy feat, considering the
fear and resentment of those in the shelters. "My neighbour, who
always said, 'Good morning', was the one who took my things, so I
want to go to a different area," Khumalo said.
A few have taken the chance and returned to
the townships. Ahmed Hassan reopened his shop in Khayelitsha on 6
June with credit from one of his suppliers. "Our people in Somalia
are all suffering and need us to support them. We decided to come
back without any help," he said.
A rough road to reintegration
According to Jeremy Michaels, Western Cape
Provincial head of communications, of the 22,000 displaced in the
province, some 1,500 had opted for repatriation to various
destinations, and around 8,000 were still in the state's "safe
sites" - like camps, community halls, churches and mosques - or on
the streets. The remaining 12,000 had returned to their communities
under their own steam.
Teams of mediators have started targeting
communities believed to be most receptive to accepting the foreign
nationals back. "It can be quite a time-consuming, intensive and
painstaking process, [but] it has happened quite successfully in a
number of communities," Hildegard Fast, provincial head of the
Disaster Management Centre, told IRIN.
The teams work with local leadership and
community organisations to mediate between the community and the
displaced, gauging acceptance and readiness on the part of both
sides to live together again, Fast said. "But we also are carefully
monitoring the safety and security aspect; we don't want to put
people back in unsafe environments."
Law must take its course, and punishment must
be communicated so communities know that those who did this were
punished, and anyone who thinks of doing what has happened here will
think twice
Khayelitsha has already been touted as a
success in terms of reintegration but some observers, like Andile
Madondile, the Khayelitsha-based Provincial Secretary of the
Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), an AIDS activist organisation,
remain sceptical and believe the government should not be solely
responsible for the process.
"It is our responsibility - as a community, as
TAC, as police officers, as ANC [African National Congress, the
ruling party] leaders, as ward councillors ... everyone has a
responsibility to take these people and make sure that they are
safe. The landlords don't want those people to come back because
they fear the community might go and break their houses," Madondile
commented.
Marlene Don of the Poor People's Movement
(PPM), a non-governmental organisation (NGO) that uses group savings
and loans schemes as a foundation for social and economic
mobilisation told IRIN: "Reintegration must start within the
communities themselves. They need to make the first move because
they were the ones who destroyed the relationship."
Mandla Majola, head of the TAC in Khayelitsha,
also stressed the importance of justice. "Law must take its course,
and punishment must be communicated so communities know that those
who did this were punished, and anyone who thinks of doing what has
happened here will think twice."
Although some of the perpetrators were known,
so far, none no one has been convicted. "Most people will be
reintegrated with the communities, but poverty is robbing us of love
and caring for humanity," Majola said.
The SCB's Jama told IRIN: "Of course we are
afraid to go back, but the biggest factor preventing our return is
lack of capital to start up again." He said the SCB had requested
start-up loans from the provincial and national governments.
But, as Hassan the shopkeeper suggested,
deep-rooted problems, like lack of adequate housing, crime, poor
service delivery and soaring unemployment, which plague all
residents in the township, would have to be addressed if communities
were to become more welcoming. "[The police] don't protect the South
Africans, so they can't protect us," he pointed out.
A number of initiatives have been started in
Khayelitsha without government assistance. Various groups, from the
TAC to minibus-taxi associations, have engaged in door-to-door
pamphlet distribution, educational sessions in schools, public
meetings, and essential patrols to monitor safety.
Yet this is not enough to keep Sarah in South
Africa. "I'm very scared. Yesterday I went to the shops and some
ladies started to say things about 'makwerekwere' [a derogative term
for African foreigners] ... so it makes you afraid. Before [the
attacks] the attitude was the same, but I could speak back," she
said. "Now, if you talk back they can say, 'I'll shoot you'." |