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ANALYSIS

Bravery & Political Will — immigration is a problem that needs to be addressed immediately

The recent furore around a Miss South Africa contestant based on questions of her nationality is another indicator of how broken is our politics of migration. Migration issues are likely to become even more intense and there will be more disputes. However, the coalition government may provide an opportunity for a solution.
Bravery & Political Will — immigration is a problem that needs to be addressed immediately Illustrative Image: South African flag. (Photo: Freepik) | Former Miss South Africa entrant Chidimma Adetshina. (Photo: Screenshot YouTube) | African continent. (Photo: Freepik)

In many modern democracies, migration is one of the most complicated issues, one that takes a high emotional toll on the entire society.

This is because of “othering”, a feeling among voters that they are “us” and migrants are “them”. In most democracies, more older people vote than younger people — and immigrants are the change that most of them oppose.

It also helps anti-immigrant forces that the politics of migration is often not rooted in fact, in South Africa and many other places. 

Many people here believe that those who were not born here should be “sent home” and that no other people should be allowed to settle here. 

This is despite the fact that if their situations were reversed, if it was South Africans who were fleeing oppression or economic desperation and going to Zimbabwe, they would have a very different view.

It is usually impossible to force people to “go home”. This is because they have made their home in the country they have moved to.

Worst prejudices

This makes a fact-based, rational political debate almost impossible. As a result, politicians use migration as the simplest of point-scoring mechanisms, while pandering to the worst prejudices in our society.

Unfortunately, as Jakkie Cilliers pointed out last week in Daily Maverick, this will only get worse. More people will move more often in the near future, driven by climate change and other emergencies.

In South Africa, the issue of migration may become even more heated and there will be more calls to “send them home”.

At the same time, there are reasons to believe this may not be as intense as the migration crisis in other countries.

This is mainly because many of the people coming into our country are from southern Africa. This is continuing a trend which has been under way for centuries (and reversing a trend that started probably millions of years ago, when human beings evolved here and then moved to the rest of the world).

This could reduce the cultural differences between South African people and migrants. 

Violent disputes between immigrants and people who have lived in a country for longer are often sparked by cultural differences, especially when coupled with religious differences.

Think of the recent riots in the UK, which appear to have been driven by the wrong belief that a person who committed a crime was an undocumented immigrant of the Islamic faith. There have been many other such cases in Europe, too.

Such incidents are less likely to occur here, particularly when so many of the countries in southern Africa share languages, political cultures (Zimbabwe, Namibia, Botswana and Mozambique are all governed by former liberation movements; at one point SA’s national anthem was the anthem of several countries in the region) and histories.

Immigration reforms

Additionally, the sheer diversity of our society means that there can be greater differences between two South Africans than between a person from South Africa and one from Zimbabwe.

The current political situation provides a brief window to introduce some immigration reforms.

This is because most of SA’s political parties are represented in Parliament in the Cabinet, and none can be individually held responsible for a policy that enables or allows immigration.

And while the Patriotic Alliance (PA) has come to define itself on its opposition to immigration (it was largely the PA that created the furore over Chidimma Adetshina’s involvement in the Miss SA contest), there may be scope to encourage it to accept an agreement.

The first reform would involve a path to full citizenship for those who already live in South Africa.

Many have built lives here and have families and community networks. It would be an act of cruelty to force mass deportation.

Unfortunately, because of our broken politics, groups which work with migrants do not get an opportunity to make this point often enough and to highlight the lived experiences of those who have been here for many years.

It is a mystery why there are so few reports about, for example, a Zimbabwean teacher who changed the lives of their learners, or a doctor from the DRC who performed a life-saving operation on a newborn South African baby. It is not difficult to rectify this.

The next hard reality for any government to accept is that for as long as South Africa has the biggest economy in the region and for as long as our neighbours have such high levels of youth unemployment, people will come here. Like gravity, this has to be accepted as part of life.

This should be the basis for any rational discussion about changing immigration laws — talk of “hard borders” or “border fences” will not solve any problems. Proper, solid and well-accepted policy will.

The other reason this is a moment to make a change is that the opposition is so weak and divided on the issue.

While the biggest opposition party, MK, has said it wants to “strengthen border control by assigning border control to the military” it has not made explicit statements about foreign nationals.

The other main opposition party, the EFF, has a long-running policy of pan-Africanism, meaning that it does not believe foreign nationals from our continent should be kept out.

There are indeed groups, often loosely organised, which strongly oppose migrants. Some have used or incited violence against people from other countries. They would certainly try to oppose any reforms.

But these groups frequently break the law and police action can deal with them.

Unfortunately, any real migration reform will require what change always requires: bravery and strong political will.

Considering how much is going on in our politics at the moment, and the fact that President Cyril Ramaphosa might well have used all of his political capital on forming the coalition government, making a change to migration policy might just be a step too far, with debates around migration getting more intense and violent.

No matter what happens, the immigration problem will not go away and we cannot ignore it. Unless treated fairly and seriously, the issue of immigration can cause massive problems — much bigger and more fundamental than just threatening South Africa’s reputation globally. DM

Comments (10)

miracle5@live.co.za Aug 19, 2024, 08:36 AM

This article inaccurately asserts the PA is opposed to immigration; it's against illegal migration and simply want the country's laws implemented. This is the same for ActionSA; so either Stephen does not read or listen, or he wilfully seek to bend the facts for some reason.

mashishiv@dws.gov.za Aug 19, 2024, 09:23 AM

He is a bully like the rest of South African media houses, they are all trying to silence South Africans who are vocal about illegal immigration in the country

Skinyela Aug 19, 2024, 09:00 AM

"It is a mystery why there are so few reports about, for example, a Zimbabwean teacher who changed the lives of their learners, or a doctor from the DRC who performed a life-saving operation on a newborn South African baby. It is not difficult to rectify this." Surely Dr and teacher came legally.

mashishiv@dws.gov.za Aug 19, 2024, 09:03 AM

This is despite the fact that if their situations were reversed, if it was South Africans who were fleeing oppression or economic desperation and going to Zimbabwe, they would have a very different view. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ I think Steve is still grasping at straws and trying to force an issue which is not really an issue here. South Africans, and mostly black South Africans did face a similar situation before during apartheid, but we never crossed any boarders to settle in other countries to commit crime of identity theft or sell drugs, what we did was immigrate to other provinces within our South African borders. If you care that much about this Nigerian girl, why don't you marry her and the whole situation will be settled. Our media is full of hypocrisy seriously.

mashishiv@dws.gov.za Aug 19, 2024, 09:17 AM

This is mainly because many of the people coming into our country are from southern Africa. This is continuing a trend which has been under way for centuries (and reversing a trend that started probably millions of years ago, when human beings evolved here and then moved to the rest of the world). ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Steven is really trying to harmer a non-issue into South African heads, OfCourse legal immigration is welcomed and will continue to be welcomed. On the other hand, illegal immigration will continue to be scorned at whether you like it or not, laws will always be amended in order to protect the countries citizens and resources. Why don't you write about countries which can't take care of their own citizens and why, like Zimbabwe and Nigeria? Whether you like it or not Steve, patriotic South Africans won't be silenced by the likes of you, we won't be bullied by our media

Lawrence Sisitka Aug 19, 2024, 09:25 AM

The expected responses. As always ignoring the very recent history of the nation-state with fixed borders, breaking the far longer histories of human migration across the planet and of course the dreadful Berlin conference which created the artificial borders Africa suffers today.

Amos J Aug 19, 2024, 09:58 AM

It has very little to do with the 1884 Berlin Conference, but all with the more recent Mugabe that destroyed the Zimbabwe economy with the approval of the the dancing citizens in the streets. Now they pay the price.

mashishiv@dws.gov.za Aug 19, 2024, 11:00 AM

Sistka was one of the dancers. He comes with this Pan Africanist dream the likes of Malema makes noise about, it won't work and it never worked

Thomas Cleghorn Aug 19, 2024, 09:39 AM

The main issue is job competition. Make sure people who work have been through the appropriate channels & are properly registered & have papers & the legal right to work (& pay tax). Thats it.

David Walker Aug 19, 2024, 10:07 AM

The media ignore the dramatic population explosion as a massive push factor in human migration. Africa will gain an additional one billion people in the coming decades. We cannot possibly accommodate these people in our economy - our own unemployment figure is already a national disaster.

Colin Braude Aug 19, 2024, 10:17 AM

Strange that, with the politicians obsessed with rewriting our history & with migration ["Uitlanders.2"], nobody is talking about "Uitlanders.1" (the Rhodes-Kruger-Milner colonisation, corruption & state capture) & what we can learn from it. Enough to make one Marxist as "History repeats itself".

Keith Wilson Aug 19, 2024, 10:22 AM

No doubt our borders are very porous and the lack of opportunities in our neighbouring states causes people to gravitate towards SA. Not really sure what Mr Grootes is advocating here? soft borders? No borders? If immigrants are here illegally, they should be sent home.

Alan Keen Aug 19, 2024, 01:35 PM

When is the world going to move away from this antiquated and discriminatory practice of classifying human beings by a dom-pass(port)? This practice was natural when humans were unable to cross mountains, rivers and oceans. But no longer. Borders are now just the connivance of politicians.