AfriForum continues with steps to ensure smoother repatriation processes
26 May 2020
The civil rights organisation AfriForum will continue with steps, including legal action, to ensure that South Africans who are currently stranded abroad or are in quarantine facilities after returning from abroad to South Africa will not be exposed to such stressful circumstances.
According to Alana Bailey, AfriForum’s Head of Cultural Affairs, she and Sue-Ann de Wet, AfriForum’s Manager of South African Diaspora, have been contacted by literally hundreds of South Africans abroad, waiting to return to South Africa since March this year. When borders started closing internationally due to COVID-19 lockdowns in many countries, some became stranded while on holiday or visiting family.
Others had been sent abroad by employers, others worked or studied overseas and their contracts or courses had finished or been terminated due to COVID-19 restrictions. Although most of those who had to fly back already had tickets for a return flight to South Africa, the airlines cancelled their flights. The relevant authorities of the countries where they were stranded and of countries through which they would now have to travel in some cases, the South African Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) and the airlines concerned henceforth first had to agree on dates, times and on how to manage the groups before repatriation flights could be finalised. This challenge remains unchanged.
“When one of the group of stakeholders suddenly changes its mind, flights are cancelled or rescheduled at short notice, causing great distress for the stranded and their loved ones back home. AfriForum is therefore constantly exchanging information between stranded South Africans, authorities and loved ones, while reminding those involved that they should keep in touch with DIRCO. Regular contact with them from DIRCO’s side is even more essential and AfriForum is also appealing for more regular and comprehensive communication from the official side.”