By Kizito Makoye
DAR ES SALAAM (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Tanzanian authorities have
threatened to deport hundreds of Ethiopian migrants who have crossed
into the country illegally while trying to make their way to South
Africa.
Charles Kitwanga, Tanzania's home affairs minister, said the
government had launched a special operation to arrest and prosecute
Ethiopians and other foreigners living or working illegally in the
country.
Last
month, police detained more than 40 Ethiopian migrants, reportedly
abandoned by their agent who had promised to smuggle them to South
Africa. They were crammed in a two-roomed house in a suburb of Dar es
Salaam.
"There
are too many foreigners who live in our country illegally, we will not
hesitate to arrest and deport them," Kitwanga told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation on Monday.
Ethiopia is experiencing its worst drought in 50 years, with more
than 10 million people unable to feed themselves because their crops
and animals have died.
The Ethiopian migrants who pass through Tanzania travel
thousands of miles packed into trucks. In June 2012, some 45 Ethiopian
migrants were found dead after they suffocated in a container truck
transporting them in central Tanzania.
According to the government, migrants usually pay traffickers around $1,000 to $2,000 to reach South Africa.
The traffickers have safe houses and contacts in Tanzania
and Malawi where the migrants are held, and sometimes look for work,
until they are able to move on.
(Reporting by Kizito Makoye, editing by Ros Russell.
Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of
Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights,
trafficking, corruption and climate change. Visit news.trust.org)
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