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Refugees say they fear death if they return to local communities

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Families living at the Bellville Paint City refugee camp say they have inadequate basic services and want the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to help them. Photos: Tariro Washinyira
Families living at the Bellville Paint City refugee camp say they have inadequate basic services and want the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to help them. Photos: Tariro Washinyira
  • The conditions for about 500 refugees living at a camp in Bellville's Paint City appear to be getting worse.
  • But many still refuse to move, claiming the UNHCR has a responsibility to assist them.
  • Home Affairs says the refugees must either move back to the communities they came from or return to their home countries.

"We would rather die here than in the communities we ran away from, where there were killings, looting and kidnapping," says Francine Nduwimana, who is among 500 refugees living at a camp in Bellville's Paint City, in Cape Town.

The refugees, including 200 children, were among the large group who started a protest outside the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) offices in Cape Town and Pretoria in October 2019. They were demanding to be resettled in a country other than South Africa.

After protracted protests, relocation to various camps and the Covid pandemic, the 500 refugees remain at Paint City in Bellville. Despite the poor conditions at the site, most of them, like Nduwimana, refuse to return to local communities.

In November last year, the group spent half the month without toilets. They have also not had showers since 2020 and experience regular water outages at the site. They have resorted to using makeshift bathrooms – built with wooden pallets and blankets for privacy. The men use a sandpit. They were also without toilets for a few weeks earlier this month.

READ | Some refugees evicted from shacks next to UNHCR office in Tshwane settle outside nearby mall

"When we were first put here, there were 20 mobile toilets, which were serviced every day. In March, the toilets became full and smelly. We complained and, without any warning, the toilets were taken away," said Nduwimana, a 40-year-old mother of three.

"To deny ablution facilities to people in this camp for over a month is hatred and xenophobia. Such treatment to children is heartbreaking. My two daughters and myself have infections. We have no toilets, nor a decent place to bath or change our sanitary wear. It's survival of the fittest," she said.

Nduwimana said they relieve themselves in plastic bags and use a small bucket of water to wash afterwards.

"We then put it in a big plastic bag that we dispose of in other bins."

This is the makeshift bathroom the women at the ca
This is the makeshift bathroom the women at the camp use. They have put up blankets for some privacy.
GroundUp

Albert Luninga, the group's representative, said the UNHCR "needs to come rescue the refugees in the Bellville camp".

"We would not sit here for four years without genuine reasons."

Luninga said: "We believed in the South African Constitution and progressive refugee laws, but in reality it's a myth. Everyone here has tried his or her best to live in the community. We moved from Khayelitsha, to Joe Slovo, Mitchells Plain and Delft.

"Our families were killed for not paying protection fees, kidnapped, and our shops looted and destroyed every time the citizens protested. We are not safe," he said.

Home Affairs spokesperson Siyabulela Qoza told GroundUp on Thursday that the toilets were removed after the refugees had threatened to damage them, and intimidated staff maintaining the toilets.

READ | About 100 refugees evicted after camping outside UNHCR's Pretoria offices

"The protesters blocked each attempt to have a new service provider deliver toilets. They eventually agreed to allow the service provider to deliver the toilets after several engagements."

Qoza said Home Affairs was "working on an exit plan with stakeholders that include the SA Police Service and the owner of the property where the Paint City temporary shelter is located. This plan was made public during a Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs meeting".

Makeshift rooms made with wood and other material
Makeshift rooms made with wood and other material inside the large white tent.

"The long-term solution is for the protesters to exercise the only two options available to them. One is to reintegrate into the communities they came from. The other is to voluntarily return to their home countries," he said.

UNHCR spokesperson Laura Padoan said the organisation had not been part of talks regarding the eviction of the protesters in Paint City or Wingfield.

"The UN Refugee Agency is concerned for the welfare of the refugees and asylum-seekers in Paint City. UNHCR had originally assisted with provision of toilets until local authorities made appropriate arrangements to manage the site."

Padoan said the organisation was urging the refugees to return to local communities, so their children could be enrolled at schools and restart their lives.

"Of the groups at Wingfield and Paint City, 67 people have returned voluntarily to Burundi, one to Cote d'Ivoire, and one to the Republic of Congo. To support those who wish to return to their countries of origin, we have established a help desk, where refugees and asylum-seekers can receive confidential advice and counselling," she said.



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