Zimbabwe’s many care workers in the UK face up to good money, but no family members

20 000 Zimbabweans were granted visas to work in care jobs in the UK, often for elderly people. • Under new rules, many can no longer relocate their families.

• The British government is trying to lower legal immigration, but critics are worried about the impact on its health service, which is heavily dependent on foreign workers.

Zimbabwean care worker Marian dreamt of her teenage daughter joining her for a new life in Britain, but new migration rules have left them stranded on different continents.

The 41-year-old boarded a plane for Britain in July after securing a job as a care worker for the elderly in the northern city of Leeds.

After an emotional goodbye, she said she took comfort in believing her 13-year-old daughter would join.

But the government’s latest attempt to clamp down on migration upended their plan.

Since March, overseas health and social care staff earning under £29 000 (R675 000) a year can no longer bring family dependents to Britain.

“I was devastated,” said Marian, who did not want her full name published.

Her job, helping the elderly wash, eat and get dressed, pays less than the required threshold.

But, she insists, it is enough to support her family.

“The amount of money that I earn here is enough to enable me to take care of my daughter,” she told AFP via Whatsapp.

Zimbabweans have been among those most affected by the new rules.

Britain has long used foreign workers, especially from English-speaking countries, to fill critical staff shortages in the healthcare system, as its ageing population increases demand.

Brexit, which saw an outflow of European workers, and the Covid pandemic have exacerbated the need.

Thousands of Zimbabwean doctors, nurses and teachers have moved to Britain to escape economic turmoil at home.

High unemployment and rampant inflation plague the impoverished former British colony. Its public health system has virtually collapsed under years of mismanagement, amid shortages of funds, staff, medicine and equipment.

‘Split up’

More than 20 000 Zimbabweans were granted UK health and care worker visas in the year ending June 2023, accounting for about 17% of the total, according to government figures.

Another 18 000 were allowed in as dependents, the third largest group behind Indians and Nigerians.

However, many others have now found the door shut.

Brighton Mutebuka, a Zimbabwean lawyer based in Leeds, said his firm was handling more than a dozen cases of families “split up” by the new rules.

Some like Shuvai Moyo, a senior nurse for the state-run National Health Service (NHS), said they considered moving away.

“I had never really seen Australia or the United States as an alternative destination but… if I can’t bring my child here, I would consider going there,” she said.

An 11th-hour promotion put her over the minimum salary threshold and she now hopes to be reunited this year with her six-year-old daughter who suffers from autism.

 

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