Thousands of foreigners remain stranded in Musina amid border delays

Thousands of foreign nationals are stranded at a temporary camp in the border town of Musina after fleeing recent xenophobic protests in South Africa. Many face delays processing overstayed visas at the Beitbridge border post with Zimbabwe and lack adequate shelter food and water.

The Musina Showgrounds camp was set up to process people for repatriation after transfers from sites like the Old Drive-in in Durban. Hundreds sleep in the open or on a metal grandstand with only one tent for some women and children. Officials have erected dozens of tents at a nearby processing centre but only a small number of people are handled daily.

Jerry Pitmike a Malawian at the site said nothing is happening and authorities are making it hard to return home. Munyaradzi Chitsike a Zimbabwean noted that many cannot cross due to overstayed visas and uncertainty about next steps. A bus crash on the N1 near Musina early on Wednesday killed the driver and injured 11 passengers.

Limpopo MEC Florence Radzilani visited on Thursday and stated the camp is well provided for with shelter and social workers present. Vhembe police Captain Vuledzani Dathi said officers are monitoring to ensure processes run smoothly. Local pastor Mashudu Tswene has been distributing aid after seeing poor conditions for families.

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Thousands of Malawian refugees gathered at an old drive-in in Durban seeking safety from anti-immigrant protests.
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Malawians seek refuge at Durban drive-in ahead of protests

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Thousands of Malawians have gathered at an old Durban drive-in site to escape violence linked to upcoming anti-immigrant protests scheduled for 30 June.

Hundreds of migrants have arrived at makeshift repatriation sites in Durban, fleeing violence in their communities. The facilities are at capacity with some sleeping outside without basic services.

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More than 100 Malawian nationals stranded outside the Malawian Embassy in Pretoria are calling on the South African and Malawian governments for help to return home. The group has spent over a week in harsh conditions without basic sanitation. A 24-year-old Malawian migrant described the difficulties they face.

Xenophobic protests in Durban over the past week have left refugees camping outside the Home Affairs office as groups set a June 30 deadline for undocumented foreigners to leave South Africa.

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Vigilante groups in KwaThema have issued a 30 June deadline for immigrants to leave, leading many to close shops amid looting and threats. In Cape Town, hundreds of Zimbabweans are camping outside their consulate seeking repatriation.

March and March organised nationwide demonstrations on 30 June calling for undocumented migrants to leave South Africa. While most protests remained peaceful, isolated incidents of looting and violence occurred in KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng.

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President Cyril Ramaphosa addressed the nation on Sunday from Pretoria, admitting government failures in managing illegal immigration and outlining new measures to strengthen borders and enforcement.

 

 

 

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