Cape Town refugee sites to stay open longer after Home Affairs backtrack
Home Affairs warned the refugees to accept offers of assistance by the UNHCR or leave the sites, but the department has not enforced the demand
- Refugees who protested outside the UNHCR offices in Cape Town in 2019 will remain at sites in Paint City and Wingfield to give “immigration officials time to complete their work”.
- The groups were offered assistance by the UNHCR to return to their home country or be reintegrated into the communities where they lived before the protest.
- While many families have taken the offers, there are still hundreds of people refusing to leave. Many of them still want to be taken to a third country.
- The UNHCR says it has so far helped over 400 people return to their communities.
Refugees who protested outside the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) offices in Cape Town in 2019 demanding to leave South Africa will remain at the two sites in Paint City and Wingfield to give “immigration officials time to complete their work”.
This is according to a statement by the Department of Home Affairs (DHA) on Friday.
On 19 April, the Minister of Home Affairs Aaron Motsoaledi warned that the offers for resettlement and repatriation to the two protesting groups, which expired last week, were final. He said services at the two sites would be withdrawn and that protestors refusing to leave would be dealt with by law enforcement.
On 26 April, the two groups living in temporary shelter sites, received notices to either take the UNHCR’s offer to help them reintegrate into the communities they lived before the protest, or to voluntarily repatriate to their countries of origin.
On Friday the department issued another statement saying the refugees could stay while officials continue processing their documents. The department said that immigration and UNHCR officials were verifying the status of some refugees who may have lost their documents as well as those who are undocumented.
The department also said that about 400 of the protesters from Wingfield and another 120 from the Paint City site were willing to be reintegrated or voluntarily repatriated.
Laurence Mambu, a representative of the Wingfield group, said there were about 390 people at the site as of last Thursday before more refugees from Bellville joined them.
Refugee leader in Paint City, Unice Akellow, said about 500 people remaining at Paint City vowed to never accept the offers.
Florence Lupaka arrived in South Africa 2007 and has asylum seeker documents. “I lost everything sleeping outside for two years,” she said.
UNHCR spokesperson Kate Pond said they are providing three months rent, food, and household items for about 400 people who have asked for assistance with reintegration.
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