 Kamala mingimi Fernanda Armanu mabonda, sebenu amela eplazi nii 70 pana. Swim zambiki, tobando mitu fulim sebeni nganeni, setafri. The health sector in South Africa, we have very good policies. I mean, generally our policies are very progressive. However, the main challenge has been really putting what is in the constitution, what is in the health policy into practice. South Africa is one of the countries that they are developing compared to our neighbouring countries. So it also attracts a lot of migrants from our neighbouring communities. When it comes to budgeting for the Department of Health, it becomes also a problem because they budget according to the population they have. So if you are at a macro immigration corridor, you cannot do your budget. At local level, they will tell you that they are not sure whether they are supposed to be giving migrant services if someone presents with TB and you treat them as whether they are migrant or non-migrant. In terms of health, that has no bearing because at the end of the day, TB is communicable. So if you do not treat them, then the person is going to go back into the community to spread the TB among the people that they live with. We are working in the farms where you have both locals and migrants. So that part of our interventions was focused on making sure that they have access to services. And we would work with the primary health care clinics, taking them to the farms. We had the primary health care clinic and we had the primary health care clinic taking them to the farms. We had within the farms a cater of change agents who were sort of the mobilizers. So they will mobilize their peers so that the people feel safe. So the clinics will provide a mobile unit on a regular basis and the change agents on that day of the mobile clinic visit, they will then mobilize the farm workers. At the clinic, it's primary health care, the normal one like if you got headache or maybe suffering from stomach ache, high hypertension or to get ARVs or TB treatment for those who are on chronics and also to check the state tests like testing for HIV. Also checking for malaria as we are in a malaria area. We realized if they just come to the work and work for 3-4 hours, go off to the clinic, get the medicines, come back with the paper. If they back in time, they can just fall in again. For us it's much better because if they ill and they don't have the medicine, they're not getting better. And if we can make plan that they can get the medicines, they become a much better worker for us in the farm. Msi tu atlini egun si te gamu nanzi nga lina nyalum tifan gamu nanzi kuna mani malangam tumbama uplunga kulu atina nga atili nga kuna atina mani nge misi atina anasili misi nga tumbama atina wabuelo barati. Now I can see a lot of migrants going to the clinics and even the mobile clinics when coming to the farms, now they even like rushing to be the first one to go to the mobile because now they know that they are able to access services even if they are migrants. By the time they arrive in a particular settlement they've been through a chain which most of the time will include a whole lot of violations. So I think it's very important that there's intentional effort to reach migrant communities without necessarily exceptionalizing them but simply because they will have additional vulnerabilities. And I think also within that once you address migrants within that context automatically everybody benefits because it means you are improving your services to be more responsive. So if not to migrants it will also be to other groups that may not necessarily have had access. So I think it becomes an advantage but I think also is the right thing to do. I think there's a whole lot of socio-economic benefits that as a country we are getting from the migrants. So while we're benefiting from them they should also benefit in terms of having their right to access health services. It's the right of everyone to have access to basic health services.