Pretoria – The government on Tuesday said around 250 000
Zimbabweans living in the country on temporary visas due to expire this year
can get three-year extensions, delaying a possible mass expulsion of workers.
Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba said a scheme that
allowed Zimbabweans to flee the political crisis at home on four-year work
visas would be extended until 2017.
"The new special permit is valid only for three
years," Gigaba told reporters, making it clear this was only a reprieve
for worried Zimbabweans.
Following violence-tainted elections in 2008 and land
grabs that spooked investors, Zimbabwe plunged into a deep recession that saw
sky-high unemployment and hyperinflation running into the billions of percent.
Zimbabweans can be found across SA working in the mining,
retail, service and financial sectors.
But Gigaba, part of a government under pressure to stem
South Africa's own high and growing levels of unemployment, indicated the
hospitality would come to an end.
Although the Zimbabwean economy is still struggling with
unemployment rates of over 50%, Gigaba said the next three years would allow
those who want to return home to do so.
"We believe the conditions [in Zimbabwe] have
improved and will continue to improve," he said.
Government in May introduced immigration reforms aimed at
tightening visa regulations and closing loopholes.