Photo: Mujahid Safodien/IRIN. The extent of child trafficking in South Africa and the region is unknown
Source: IRIN
JOHANNESBURG, 17 September 2014 (IRIN) - The announcement yesterday that
parents would have another nine months to comply with new regulations
for travelling into and out of South Africa with their children has been
met with a collective sigh of relief.
The new requirements, which had been due to come into effect on 1
October, state that parents, regardless of nationality, must produce
unabridged birth certificates for children travelling with them and that
one parent travelling with a child must have the written consent of the
other parent or a court order granting them legal guardianship.
When the regulations were announced in late May, South Africa’s Home
Affairs Ministry described them as “for the safety of children,
including their protection from child trafficking, abduction and
kidnapping”.
However, migration experts have questioned whether South Africa has a
significant child trafficking problem and if it does, whether stricter
regulations are the best way to deal with it.
“I think the biggest question is whether the trafficking of children
through formal ports of entry has been identified as a big problem and I
haven’t seen any data to suggest that,” said Chandre Gould, a senior
researcher with the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) who has
researched the role of human trafficking in Cape Town’s sex work
industry.
While South Africa is often described as a major hub for the trafficking
of victims from within the country, the region and beyond, the extent
to which these claims are backed up by evidence is limited.
The often fine line between human trafficking and migrant smuggling that
takes place at South Africa’s borders has further confused the issue.
For example, undocumented Zimbabwean migrants living and working in
South Africa, sometimes pay taxi drivers known as malaishas to smuggle
their children across the border. While most malaishas do just that,
there are indications that some traffic the children they are transporting into forced labour or sex work, although such cases are very difficult to prove.
Anti-human trafficking law not yet in effect
New legislation to counter human trafficking was signed into law by
President Jacob Zuma in July 2013, but the necessary implementing
regulations have not been finalized and as a result, the law has yet to
come into effect. Gould pointed out that one of the requirements of the
new law was the establishment of a database that would track trafficking
cases. In the absence of such a database, no figures are available as
to the extent of trafficking into or out of South Africa.
ISS together with the African Centre for Migration and Society (ACMS) at
Witwatersrand University, and fact-checking web site Africa Check
produced a brief
in May 2014 which states that “there is no systematic research
available that provides comprehensive insight into the prevalence or
patterns of trafficking into or out of South Africa or the Southern
African region.”
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) noted in a 2010
report that it assisted 306 victims of human trafficking in the entire
Southern Africa region between 2004 and 2010, an average of 51 cases per
year.
The US Department of State’s Trafficking in Persons Report
2014 notes that “South African children are subjected to trafficking
mainly within the country, recruited from poor rural areas and brought
to and moved between urban centres.”
Loren Landau, director of ACMS, told IRIN that “whatever [child
trafficking] is taking place is likely to be channeled through informal
border crossings where documentation has never been a major hindrance.
“While many children move across South African borders and many of these
may require protection of some kind… I sense we should be far more
careful about developing a heavy-handed and securitized approach to
these concerns,” he added.
However, Yitna Getachew, regional specialist on counter trafficking with
IOM, said that while reliable data on child trafficking was not
available, “many victims travel legitimately, with proper documentation
and end up being subjected to exploitation.”
“Documentation only, will of course not address the issue of
trafficking,” he told IRIN, noting that it needed to be complemented by
other measures such as law enforcement and adequate screening. “But it
certainly makes the work of traffickers a bit more difficult.”
Gender issue
Gould of ISS worried that the greatest impact of the new regulations
could be on single mothers who would struggle to obtain an affidavit
from the fathers of their children when they wanted to travel. “Given
that over 60 percent of children in South Africa grow up with an absent
father, that means it becomes a gendered issue because it becomes
difficult for single mothers with children to travel,” she said.
Spokesperson for the Department of Home Affairs Mayihlome Tshwete said
single mothers unable to trace absent fathers could obtain affidavits to
that effect from their local police station. “We are mindful of
adjustments that travellers will have to make, but we think that they
are the right security measures to take to protect the most vulnerable
in our society,” he said, noting that besides child trafficking, there
were a number of cases of children being taken out of the country by one
parent without the consent of the other.
At a press briefing on Tuesday, Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba
emphasized that the regulations remained in place, their implementation
was simply being postponed to address concerns raised by the tourism
sector that travellers would struggle to comply over the busy Christmas
and Easter periods.
South African parents have also complained that obtaining an unabridged
birth certificate can take many months. Home Affairs began issuing
unabridged birth certificates to all children born from March 2013, but
parents of children born between 1996 and February 2013, have to apply
for them.