Lindela
Repatriation Centre Deportees awaiting dispatch
|
More than 400
Mozambicans have returned home after being deported from neighboring South
Africa, many spending their first night in the country sleeping in tents at a
local repatriation centre.
In South Africa, they were arrested when they were
found without proper documents, some told the Associated Press. In nationwide
raids, South African police arrested about 750 immigrants living in the country
illegally.
AP reports:
"The police first asked for my ID, which I didn't
have," said Jose Macuacua, who said he was not allowed to gather his
belongings before he was taken to the Lindela Repatriation Centre. There he met
dozens of other immigrants from other southern African countries, like Lesotho,
Zimbabwe and Malawi.
Macuacua, 26, said he entered South Africa illegally
when guards at a border post failed to check if he had a passport. He lived in
South Africa for two years, selling cellphone SIM cards, he said.
Maria da Gloria Mathe said she and her husband lived
in the city of Rustenburg, in the South African platinum mining area, for four
years, where they sold clothes.
"We collected what we could in a hurry, because
the police were standing at the door of our shop," said Mathe.
The deportations come weeks after anti-foreigner
attacks in South Africa in which seven people were killed, including at least
one Mozambican. While South African officials condemned the violence, they have
also sought to address complaints that immigrants living in the country
illegally are taking employment opportunities from South Africans.
But the Mozambican government said it was surprised by
the deportations.
"We
expected to hold talks with the South Africans to discuss the problem, but we
just saw people being arrested," said Mozambique's Foreign and Cooperation
Minister, Oldemiro Baloi.
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