
Posted by africa on 12/15/2005, 4:18:27, in reply to "From the newspaper" --Previous Message--
193.32.3.83
I agree. If you really think about it you will realize that South Africa and no other country is where you will find true understanding and happiness. No faking it.
: Figures released by Statistics South Africa
: indicate that there has been a staggering
: increase in the number of highly qualified
: citizens that have left the country to find
: jobs elsewhere.
:
: In spite of the booming South African
: economy the figure almost doubled between
: 1999 and 2003 when the last statistics were
: compiled. The majority of people leaving for
: foreign countries are engineers, doctors and
: teachers who cannot find jobs in South
: Africa.
:
: Some business leaders have called on the
: government to cap affirmative action
: policies or to exclude young people from
: such policies. They have warned that
: qualified people will continue leaving the
: country if they cannot find employment or if
: they have no real prospect of making a
: living in their own country.
:
: housands who leave the country don't
: disclose that they are in fact emigrating
: The government has also been slammed for
: trying to recruit foreigners for local jobs
: while thousands of the country's own
: qualified citizens are available for such
: positions.
:
: Despite renewed confidence in the economy,
: figures by Statistics SA indicate there was
: an increase of 90% in the number of
: emigrants that left the country over a
: six-year period.
:
: It found that that 16 165 people emigrated
: in 2003 "in search of a better life and
: opportunities" compared with 8 487 in
: 1999. The 2003 figure represents a 48.4
: percent increase over the 2002 figure of 10
: 890 emigrants.
:
: But even these figures may not tell the true
: story. Thousands who leave the country don't
: disclose that they are in fact emigrating.
:
: And department of home affairs special
: adviser Mike Ramagoma has disclosed that the
: Immigration Act of 2002 did not require that
: data on South Africans leaving the country
: permanently, or otherwise, be recorded
: because of exorbitant costs.
:
: "This was deemed a costly exercise and
: requires vast human and physical
: resources," he said.
:
: However, Foreign Affairs Minister Nkosazana
: Dlamini-Zuma amended the act last year to
: make it possible for statistics to be
: recorded again at SA airports, he added. He
: said people leaving and coming into South
: Africa had to present their SA passports
: irrespective of whether they had dual
: citizenship, or not.
:
: The statistics of self-declared emigrants
: show that the most popular destinations are
: Australasia and North America.
:
: Stats SA spokesperson Kenneth Manikela said
: New Zealand and Australia were the most
: popular countries to which South Africans
: were emigrating, mainly because of the
: similar lifestyle and weather patterns.
:
: Stats SA figures show 2 523 South Africans
: emigrated to Australasia in 2002, compared
: with 3 248 in 2003. A total of 1 430 people
: left the country for the US and Canada in
: 2002, compared with 1 998 in 2003.
:
: South Africans emigrating to countries in
: Africa totalled 1 461 in 2002, compared with
: 2 611 in 2003. Manikela said emigration
: trends were increasing year after year as
: people sought better opportunities abroad.
:
: "We have very good teachers,
: accountants, nurses and doctors, and this
: expertise is being sought by other
: countries," he said.
:
: Manikela said better prospects overseas were
: not the only reason. "People have
: certain fears which could prompt them
: leaving their country of birth, but this is
: a phenomenon throughout the world,"
: said Manikela.
:
: But it's not all bad news for the country,
: says Homecoming Revolution, an independent
: organisation which provides assistance and
: information to expatriates who want to
: return home.
:
: Spokeswoman Megan Wood said 8 000 former
: South Africans had made inquiries over the
: past two years about returning home. She
: believes the number of South Africans
: leaving the country and those returning are
: "starting to level out".
:
: "Currently for every person leaving the
: country there is someone heading to South
: Africa," said Wood.
:
: Documented immigrants to South Africa in
: 2003 totalled 10 578 and rose to 10 714 in
: 2004, an increase of about 1,2 person.
:
: Wood said her organisation was receiving
: inquiries mainly from South Africans in
: Britain, Australia and the United Arab
: Emirates about the possibility of returning
: home.
:
: Wood said many SA expats were unhappy in
: other countries. "But they can't just
: pack up because another move back to South
: Africa could have huge financial
: implications for them."
:
:
:
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