海角大神

Why South Africa is closing its doors to migrants it once welcomed

A member of the South African anti-migrant group Operation Dudula holds a sign during a march to the Diakonia Council of Churches offices demanding they cease assisting undocumented African immigrants, in Durban, South Africa, July 7, 2022.

Rogan Ward/Reuters

August 8, 2022

When Petunia Sibanda came to South Africa from Zimbabwe in 2003, she arrived the way most people she knew did in those days 鈥 late at night, crossing over a dry patch of the Limpopo River that slices the two countries from each other, pretending not to see the crocodiles in the distance.聽

For several years, she lived her life in South Africa on the margins, constantly afraid her lack of legal status would be found out and she would be sent back home to a country where the economy was in free fall.聽

Then Ms. Sibanda found a lifeline. In 2011, she heard about a special visa for Zimbabweans, which would allow them to live and work in South Africa legally.聽

Why We Wrote This

Countries around the globe are grappling with migrant inflows. A looming decision by South Africa, the continent's biggest host, could set the tone across Africa for years to come.

鈥淚 could live freely for the first time,鈥 she says.

But the reprieve was always temporary. Last November, the South African government confirmed that it would no longer renew the 178,000 so-called Zimbabwe Exemption Permits it had issued. All ZEP holders, including Ms. Sibanda, had until the end of 2022 to get a different visa, or leave the country permanently.

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Ms. Sibanda and tens of thousands of others in her position now face an existential question. Do they stay in the country where they have made their lives for the last decade, starting families and businesses, and become undocumented? Or do they return to the country they fled all those years ago, where conditions are perhaps even worse than a decade ago?聽How South Africa handles the issue in the coming months will set the tone in a region that, like elsewhere in the world, is grappling with growing xenophobia amid shrinking resources.聽

鈥淲e love our country, but we have nothing to go back to,鈥 says Ms. Sibanda, whose four children were all born in South Africa.聽

Political points

Immigration has long been a hot-button political issue in South Africa. The country鈥檚 relative wealth, developed industries, and expansive legal rights for foreigners 鈥 at least on paper 鈥 have made it a popular destination for migrants from across Africa since the end of apartheid.

Today, it hosts聽聽migrants than any other country in Africa. Simultaneously, though, amid high poverty and unemployment, anti-immigrant sentiment is often used by political leaders to rally working-class voters, and xenophobic violence flares regularly.

In practical terms, ZEP holders are a tiny fraction of South Africa鈥檚 migrant population, which is聽聽between 3 million and 4 million people. But their case has taken on an outsize symbolic significance here, becoming a lightning rod in a wider debate about the role of migrants in the country.聽

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When the government聽announced it would no longer renew ZEPs, the move was held up by political leaders as proof聽that they were doing something about South Africa鈥檚 rising unemployment and overstrained public services in the shadow of two years of a global pandemic.聽It came as an anti-immigrant vigilante movement called Operation Dudula 鈥 Zulu for 鈥渢o beat back鈥 鈥 has organized sometimes-violent mass rallies around the country to intimidate immigrants.聽

For many Zimbabweans, making a new life in South Africa has been a halting, fraught process. Waves of xenophobic violence have swept the country several times in the past decade, targeting working-class foreigners and their businesses. Most recently, in 2021, many foreign-owned businesses were looted during widespread riots triggered by the arrest of former President Jacob Zuma on corruption charges, an issue entirely unrelated to immigration.聽

Terminating the ZEP 鈥渋s an easy way to score points with voters,鈥 says Loren Landau, a senior researcher at the African Centre for Migration and Society at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a populist move.鈥

Ironically, the ZEP has its origins in neighborly solidarity. When an economic crisis ricocheted across Zimbabwe in the early 2000s and its agricultural economy collapsed, the government there began furiously printing more money. By November 2008, inflation hit 79.6 billion percent, and political repression from the party of President Robert Mugabe, which had ruled the country since 1980, was deepening. The result was a mass exodus. Most of those migrants ended up in South Africa.

In response, the South African government created a permit called the Dispensation of Zimbabweans Project (DZP), which it called a 鈥済esture of support and solidarity鈥 with Zimbabwe 鈥 and which also relieved pressure on its own systems. South Africa鈥檚 government continued to replace the permit with similar visas until November 2021, noting that Zimbabwe remained in crisis and that Zimbabweans 鈥渉ave made聽聽contributions鈥 to South African society.

鈥淪outh Africa is my home鈥

Farai Mukucha was one of the Zimbabweans who arrived during the more fortunate days. He left Zimbabwe in 2007, and during his first years in the country scraped together a series of informal jobs. In 2010, he applied for the DZP, which allowed him to work formally for the first time as an electrician. He now runs his own business, and two of his three children were born in South Africa.

鈥淭o be honest with you, if I go to Zimbabwe now, I鈥檒l be like a foreigner there,鈥 he says. 鈥淵es, it鈥檚 my home country, but South Africa is my home.鈥澛

Very few ZEP holders are eligible for other types of visas, says Luke Dzviti, chair of the Zimbabwe Immigration Federation, an organization formed earlier this year in order to bring a legal challenge against the government鈥檚 decision. As in countries like the United States, migrants in South Africa must prove they are critically skilled in certain professions, or that their employer could not find a South African who could do the job for which they are being hired.聽

The government insists the rules are necessary to protect jobs for South Africans, given that the country鈥檚 formal unemployment rate hovers around 34%. It has also argued that it needs to regulate scarce resources within the Home Affairs Department 鈥 which also issues IDs, passports, and other documents 鈥 for citizens. But a 2021 study for the Department of Employment and Labour found migrants鈥 presence in the country had little effect on major issues in the labor market like unemployment and low wages.

Crises around unemployment and public spending aren鈥檛 closely linked to migration, adds Mr. Landau of the African Centre for Migration and Society. Instead, they鈥檙e easy ways to drum up political support ahead of a 2024 national election that is widely expected to be the biggest challenge to the African National Congress, which has been in power since democracy in 1994.聽

Mr. Dzviti鈥檚 court challenge is one of three currently in motion challenging the legality of ending the ZEP.

鈥淲hen government makes a decision with such consequences for the lives of so many people, the decision must be taken fairly, and we鈥檝e argued that this one was not,鈥 says Nicole Fritz, executive director of the Helen Suzman Foundation, which brought another of the court challenges. The foundation argues, among other things, that the government didn鈥檛 properly consult with those who would be affected by the change 鈥 a legal argument that has been used with in other recent cases.

In response, South Africa鈥檚 Department of Home Affairs issued a statement calling the choice to challenge the government鈥檚 decision in courts 鈥渄isturbing鈥 and 鈥渟abotage鈥 of South African democracy.聽

鈥淭he decision of the Minister not to extend the exemptions granted to Zimbabwean nationals has been widely supported by South African citizens,鈥 wrote Home Affairs Minister Aaron Motsoaledi.聽

The three court cases will be heard together in October. Meanwhile, ZEP holders like Ms. Sibanda are in limbo.聽

鈥淲e are being thrown into the dark,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 know what future is on the other side.鈥澛