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Charity Atukunda

July 4th, 2019

The visa centre: immigrants, white saviours and uneven rejection

13 comments | 88 shares

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Charity Atukunda

July 4th, 2019

The visa centre: immigrants, white saviours and uneven rejection

13 comments | 88 shares

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Artist Charity Atukunda reveals the hurdles faced by African nationals attempting to travel freely, and how they are rooted in the idea of ‘escaping’ home for the ‘first world’. Recounting personal experience, and using illustrations, Charity exposes the unequal treatment of people globally who seek free movement.

This post is part of a mini-series exploring the global inequalities of the visa system and its effects.

The UK Visa and Immigration centre was quiet. Everyone spoke in low voices or whispered; a giant UK flag sticker was neatly adhered to the wall and a glass barrier separated me from the receptionist. Her photocopier was down and she was impatient. She told me to go into the next room after looking through my papers. It was air conditioned. Two people sat and waited ahead of me.

It was mostly women doing all the work – beautiful, young, Ugandan women in their early 30s, I guessed, with delicate features, silk floral blouses, perfect haircuts, expensive perfumes and manicured nails that made rhythmic clicks on their computer mice as they processed documents. While they had kind faces they seemed to have mastered the art of detachment as required by their employers.

All this reminded me of my first emotional tax in 2008, in Uganda, a land my family hadn’t seen for 12 years but was called home. My sister and I made our way to the US Embassy to apply for visas in order to return and continue our education in the USA. The embassy stretched across the busy Ggaba road, with a high wall.

Uganda visa immigration UK

To this day my sister and I joke and call our interviewer Mr. Smith, like the villain from the Matrix. There was a cold calculated way about him during our interviews, or maybe we imagined it, but his response was NO. Twice. We couldn’t go back to America after living and learning there for 12 years, we couldn’t continue our lives, our education, because we had a lack of strong ties to our own country, he said, and we would never come back to Uganda if we were allowed to return to America. You can imagine the sadness and disappointment and what it meant to start over.

I read the papers in front of me again. The air conditioning, which was refreshing upon entry, now entered my skin. The Visa Processing Centre could not be held liable if a visa was rejected. The lady in front of me was now going through my paperwork, checking boxes and crossing out lines for the things I was missing.

My first experience of Visa Processing Centres, and the money making machines they are, was when I applied for a visa to South Africa in 2016. The system is designed in such a way that your whole life, your entire narrative on paper, has to make perfect sense to a stranger. I thought that going to another African country would be simpler, but no… However, I was determined not to miss out, so I did my research. I presented my papers to the one of the visa tellers. At first she was surprised. She was used to sending people back, but my papers were in order. Just as she was about to stamp and approve, the bright yellow fever card caught her eye again. She handed me back my papers and said, ‘You took this vaccination too late, you have to wait at least 10 days before travelling.’ I said to her that by the time I would be in South Africa 10 days will definitely have passed. She said, ‘no, it’s not possible’.

With a great weight hanging on my shoulders and having to motivate myself again, despite the fear of another looming NO, I went back to Kampala Capital City Authority, got a second injection, backdated my card and returned to the Visa Processing Centre to resubmit my papers. Because of that one delay my visa, although approved, arrived two days after my flight and I never went to South Africa.

Despite my disappointments I tried again, this time to the UK for the Africa Summit at the London School of Economics. I was invited as a delegate to present my work and, of course, I was determined. In all these experiences I couldn’t help but be bothered by the fact that these things probably don’t happen to my white friends or those who hold ‘good’ passports, such as people from Europe or America. They are not aware this world exists or, if they are, they do not have to experience it. In those moments when I fill out visa applications I envy the ease of being able to travel wherever you want, when you want, without having to prove to someone that you are worthy.

It bothers me that these hurdles are set in place. The dominant narrative is that we all seek to escape our countries, yet some of us have no interest in ‘escaping’ to the ‘first world’.

There is a lot of ridicule towards the immigrant, the traveller of colour, when entering ‘first world’ countries, but few talk about the mostly white migrants and immigrants who have made a life in ‘third world’ countries, mislabelled as ‘expatriates’. Not all who enter have good intentions. There are so called ‘white saviours’, NGOs started left and right, churches of every denomination keen on claiming souls, volunteers, missionaries, all assigned their own category by Ugandan immigration; there are interns, adventurers, artists, entrepreneurs, and more. Some ‘expatriates’ spend years renewing tourists visas, or simply not having a status, bribing their pass through the decades. Rarely is it spoken about in influential media, but there are numerous people who profit from their privilege as foreigners. They amass wealth and live comfortably. Some fail and start a new venture, some stick around and take life day by day, and if things completely fall apart they can return to their home countries. Rarely are questions asked. Rarely are there reparations for social or economic damage caused or responsibility taken for what is left behind. They can start afresh somewhere else.

I believe in open doors. I believe we must look forward to a world where such a system is the future, and I will continue to try and travel though the odds are not in my favour. I have numerous opportunities to achieve everything I want and they will not stop coming, but the dominant narrative that allows someone like me, coming from a country like Uganda, to be aggressively interrogated and dehumanised in order to achieve mobility must be dismantled.

I think about all of this on a boda-boda ride, as I head back home. I hold my rejection statement in my purse, unsurprised but disappointed. My visa to the UK was rejected. They were not convinced or satisfied that I was a ‘genuine visitor’ to the UK based on my paperwork, believing that I did not sufficiently ‘demonstrate’ that I intend to leave the UK upon completion of my visit.

The last line I read on the rejection statement keeps playing in my head:

‘In relation to this decision, there is no right of appeal or right to administrative review’.
– British High Commission Pretoria

All illustrations are by Charity Atukunda.

About the author

Charity Atukunda

Charity Atukunda is a visual artist, passionate about drawing and digital illustration. Her work often explores and questions the ideas, beliefs and systems that govern our lives. She currently resides on Kampala, Uganda.

Posted In: Society

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