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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## M.K v Minister of Home Affairs (2025-046181)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 468 (11 April 2025)
M.K v Minister of Home Affairs (2025-046181)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 468 (11 April 2025)
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sino date 11 April 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number: 2025-046181
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
M[…]
K[...]
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and
authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date
and for hand-down is deemed to
be 11 April 2025.
Summary: Urgent
application seeking an interdict pending the final determination of a
review application. On application of the
OUTA
principle,
launching of a review application does not entitle an applicant for
review to an interdict pending the outcome of the
review application.
A statutory function once performed is incapable of being suspended
by a Court of law. Although the application
was heard as one of
urgency, the applicant is not entitled to a final relief of an
interdict. The essential requirement of clear
right has not been
demonstrated. None of the rights of the children of the applicant are
affected as such no protectable rights
of theirs require protection
by a remedy of an interdict. Exercise of statutory function is
incapable, absent
mala fide
exercise thereof, of being
interdicted. Held: (1) The application is heard as one of urgency in
terms of Rule 6(12) of the Uniform
Rules of Court. Held: (2) The
application is dismissed. Held: (3) There is no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
The urgent Court of this Division is
inundated with immigration cases. The majority of cases involves
illegal foreigners seeking
to extend their stay in the Republic for
reasons that they had launched PAJA judicial reviews against their
rejection of asylum
visas. In most instances, like in the present
application, the Minister of Home Affairs or the Department of Home
Affairs choose
not to oppose such applications. Inasmuch as this
Court is appreciative and acknowledges capacity challenges in the
office of the
State Attorney, the proper administration of justice is
handicapped by the absence of the Minister or the Department when
these
matters are heard in Court.
[2]
More
often than not applicants, to their own advantage, of course, fail to
disclose all the relevant facts that will enable a Court
to
disseminate justice and exercise proper judicial authority as
enjoined by section 165 of the Constitution. At the very least,
this
Court expects the Minister or the Department officials to depose to
an explanatory affidavits, and most importantly avail
the relevant
documents. This proposed benevolence on the part of the relevant
officials will go a long way towards a proper administration
of
justice and effective exercise of judicial authority. To my mind,
such is a gesture of accountability contemplated in section
195(1)(f)
of the Constitution
[1]
.
[3]
The above said, this is an unopposed urgent
application in terms of which, the applicant, Mr M[...] K[...] (Mr
K[...]), firstly
seeks audience on an urgent basis within the
contemplation of Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of this Court.
Secondly, he seeks
reliefs that (a) pending the finalisation of Part
B, the Form 23 (
Notices by Immigration
Officer to Person to Appear before Director General
)
issued in terms of section 33(4)(c) of the Immigration Act, dated 31
March 2025 be suspended; (b) pending the finalisation of
Part B, the
respondents be ordered to issue and/or extend the asylum permit of
the first applicant; (c) interdicting the respondents
from initiating
any process to detain and/or deport and/or order the first applicant
to depart from the Republic of South Africa
pending the final
determination of Part B; and (d) payment of costs on attorney and
client scale.
Brief factual
exposition
[4]
Mr K[...] is a foreign national of the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). He is a self-professed singer.
When he was in the DRC,
he used to sing songs which criticised the
ruling People’s Party for Reconstruction and Democracy (PPRD).
He was an ordinary
member of the Movement of the Liberation of Congo
(MLC). He participated in the activities of MLC as a local singer at
the events
organised by the MLC.
[5]
In one of the meetings held at a secret
location in Kinshasa during 2008, the government security forces
infiltrated such a meeting.
The attending members were assaulted,
arrested and brutally killed. Following this incident, Mr K[...]
lived in fear and received
threats of a political nature. Both his
parents, brother and sister were killed and their dead bodies were
displayed outside his
homestead. Owing to the above situation, he
fled DRC through a truck that was travelling to South Africa through
Zimbabwe and Zambia.
[6]
He arrived in South Africa around June
2008. I interpose to mention that, Mr K[...] vaguely testified that
in June 2008, he applied
to be recognised as an asylum seeker.
Perplexingly, the asylum seeker temporary visa attached to the
founding papers of Mr K[...]
was issued on 12 March 2024. The visa
was to expire on 20 August 2024. One of the conditions were that Mr
K[...] was booked for
appeal hearing on 20 August 2024. With the
benefit of the benevolence mentioned earlier, this Court would have
been wised up to
the correct facts to demystify or better still
detangle this apparent cobweb.
[7]
It must be so, as it is often the case with
immigrants who enters South Africa not using the recognised port of
entry, that from
2008 to March 2024, Mr K[...] was an undocumented
illegal foreigner in South Africa. In South Africa, the
self-confessed singer
worked as motorbike driver doing deliveries.
During 2016, Mr K[...] married one Ms Kunga Ngemba Delice, a
Congolese national. Two
minor children were born in South Africa and
their births were registered in South Africa. The two minor children
were mentioned
as the second and third applicants (Ms N[...] M[...]
C[...] K[...], born on 20 June 2018; and Mr K[...] M[...] B[...],
born on
25 April 2021). I interpose to mention that given the ages of
the minor children, they do not possess a legal standing to litigate
in their own rights. Nowhere in the founding affidavit does Mr K[...]
aver that he is, in his capacity as their parent and legal
guardian,
litigating on their behalf.
[8]
On or about 16 August 2023, Mr K[...]
received correspondence from the Department of Home Affairs to report
to the Pretoria Refugee
Reception Centre (PRRC) to meet with the
Refugee Status Determination Officer (RSDO) in order to finalize
outstanding administrative
matters of his claim to be a refugee. At
that meeting an interview on other matters related to his application
for asylum may have
been included.
[9]
In his founding papers, Mr K[...] is
economical with regard to the events of the meeting of 16 November
2023 with the RSDO. It is
unclear as to what obtained with regard to
his mentioned application for asylum and the administrative issues
relating to his claim
of being a refugee. Tersely, he averred that
all what happened is the handing over of a notice of appeal and an
instruction to
commission an affidavit at the police station, which
he duly complied with. I interpose to mention that an explanatory
affidavit
by Ms Bridgette Mantutule Morudi, the RSDO, would have
illuminated facts to assist this Court.
[10]
An appeal was indeed launched, to which
decision, this Court is none the wiser. An appeal hearing sat on 27
August 2024. Vaguely,
Mr K[...] testifies about a first hearing where
he was offered the services of an interpreter. He laments that at the
appeal hearing,
he was not afforded the services of an interpreter as
a French speaking person. The impugned decision of the appeal body
records
that Mr K[...] waived the right to an interpreter.
Nonetheless, on 16 October 2024, a member of the Refugee Appeals
Authority of
South Africa (RAASA), the erudite Ms Z B[...], handed
down a detailed outcome. The conclusion reached by Ms B[...] was that
(a)
the appeal of M[...] K[...] is dismissed. Refugee protection is
accordingly denied; (b) the Registrar of RAASA is instructed to
finalise the matter by serving the decision on Appellant and the
Department.
[11]
Resultantly, on 31 March 2025, the
Immigration Officer exercised a statutory power bestowed on him by
section 33(4)(c) of the Immigration
Act by issuing a notice to Mr
K[...] calling upon him to appear before the Director General of the
Department of Home Affairs (DoH).
The reason for the appearance was
for him to bring along his passport and bus or flight ticket within
14 days.
[12]
On
or about 3 April 2025, Mr K[...] launched the present application in
two parts. The part B, which is not presently before this
Court is, a
review of the decision of the RSDO, the date of which is unknown and
the decision taken by Ms B[...] on 16 October
2024. I pause to
mention that service of the application upon the Minister has been
effected by electronic mail contrary to Rule
4(9) of the Uniform
Rules of this Court. In terms of section 2(2) of the State Liability
Act
[2]
, service to the Minister
must be effected on the State Attorney. Service was improper. This
may explain the non-appearance. Since
Mr K[...] sought to be indulged
within the contemplation of Rule 6(12), the present application was
heard nevertheless.
Evaluation
[13]
Minor children do not have a legal standing
to litigate on their own behalf. Mr K[...] made no averment that he
is instituting the
present application on behalf of the minor
children. No relief has been sought in the notice of motion in favour
of the minor children.
There is no evidence that the impugned Form 23
has named the minor children. There is no allegation that the minor
children are
facing possible deportation. Nevertheless, there is no
evidence that the minor children were part of the asylum seeker’s
application. Section 21B(2A) of the Refugees Act provides that any
child of an asylum seeker born in the Republic has the same status
as
accorded to an asylum seeker. Ultimately the status of Mr K[...] is
that of an illegal foreigner. Therefore, in terms of the
applicable
law, the minor children acquired the status of being illegal
foreigners. In terms of section 32(2) of the Immigration
Act, any
illegal foreigner shall be deported. In his founding affidavit, Mr
K[...], other than reciting case authorities and applicable
international charters, makes no case as to which of the minor
children’s rights are being harmed or threatened with harm.
During oral submissions, counsel for Mr K[...] attempted to make a
case to the effect that once Mr K[...] is deported, the children
will
be separated from their parent and such a separation does not serve
the best interest of the minor children, contrary to section
28 of
the Constitution. This is a submission made in hollow. There is
simply no such case made, properly so, in the papers before
Court.
The pending review application does not seek to vindicate any of the
minor children’s rights. There is no evidence
that they were
part of the meeting where the rights of Mr K[...] were allegedly
trampled upon.
[14]
Owing to the fact that Mr K[...] was
afforded 14 days to appear before the Director General, this Court
was satisfied that an urgent
relief is necessary and Mr K[...] may
not be afforded a substantial redress in due course, if the
Immigration Officer acted unlawfully
or with
mala
fide,
by issuing the so-called Form 23.
[15]
Turning to the merits of the present
application, regard being had to the reliefs sought by Mr K[...], the
questions to be addressed
in this judgment are (a) is this Court
empowered to suspend the issued Form 23 notice; (b) is this Court
empowered to order the
Minister to extend the asylum permit; and (c)
is Mr K[...] entitled to a final relief interdicting and restraining
any process
to detain, deport or order the departure of Mr K[...]
pending the final determination of part B of this application.
Suspension of the
issued Form 23 notice
[16]
During
oral submissions, this Court raised a concern with counsel for Mr
K[...], regarding the powers of this Court to suspend a
notice issued
in the exercise of statutory power. In support of a submission that a
Court is so empowered, counsel placed reliance
on the decision of the
learned Acting Justice Andrews in the matter of
Sattar
and others v Minister of Home Affairs and another (Sattar)
[3]
.
[17]
By
issuing Form 23, the Immigration Officer exercises powers approbated
to him by section 33(4)(c) of the Immigration Act
[4]
.
The section reads:
“
(4)
An immigration officer may, for the purposes of this Act –
(a)
…
(b)
…
(c)
By notice in writing call upon any person
to appear before the Director-General and to give evidence or to
answer questions relevant
to the subject matter of the investigation:
Provided that any such
notices shall specify the time when and the place where the person to
whom it is directed shall appear, be
signed by an immigration
officer, be served by an immigration officer or a sheriff by
delivering a copy thereof to the person concerned…,
and shall
specify the reason why the thing is to be produced or the evidence is
to be given.”
[18]
Without
deciding, whether the issued Form 23 amounts to an administrative
action or not, any exercise of statutory power is subject
to judicial
review either in terms of PAJA or legality review. An administrative
action remains valid until set aside by a Court
with competent
jurisdiction
[5]
. Before me, the
applicant is not seeking a judicial review of the Form 23.
Accordingly, in my view, this Court is not authorised
to suspend an
exercise of statutory power. The power is already exercised and the
only manner in which the already exercised power
may vacate is by way
of a review.
Sattar
is not authority for the proposition that a Court is authorised to
suspend the Form 23 notice. The suspension ordered in
Sattar
was
part of a structural interdict. The basis for the structural
interdict was clearly spelled out by the learned Andrews AJ as
follows:
“
[54]
… Having found that the nature of these proceedings is deemed
inherently urgent, a review of the respective
Form 23 notices in the
fullness of time will still render the Applicants vulnerable to
arrest and deportation without them having
been afforded an
opportunity to apply for asylum. The Applicants contended that
without a court order directing the DHA to provide
them with an
opportunity to apply for asylum and have those applications decided
on its merits, the Applicants remain without a
remedy. There is very
real fear of the Applicants facing imminent arrest and deportation if
regard is had to the manner in which
the Form 23 is framed.”
[19]
As
an indication that the suspension is part of structural interdict
designed by the learned Acting Justice, the suspension was
conditioned on the applicants in there presenting themselves to the
nearest RRO, in order to be interviewed and to show
good
cause,
as steps towards applying for asylum. In the present matter, Mr
K[...], seemingly, went through the process of applying for asylum.
In terms of section 24(5)(b) of the Refugees Act
[6]
,
an asylum seeker whose application for asylum has been rejected in
terms of subsection (3)(c) must be dealt with in terms of the
Immigration Act, unless he or she lodges an appeal in terms of
section 24B(1).
[20]
Unlike the applicants in
Sattar
,
Mr K[...] became a subject of the Immigration Act effective 16
October 2024, since his appeal was rejected in terms section 24B(2)
of the Immigration Act. Undoubtedly, the rejections turned him into
an illegal foreigner.
[21]
Accordingly, absent a judicial review, this
Court is not empowered to suspend the Form 23. Thus, a prayer seeking
such a relief
stands to fail.
A power to order
extension of the asylum permit
[22]
The issue of asylum visa is regulated by
chapter 2 of the Refugee Act. In terms of section 22(1) of the
Refugee Act, an asylum seeker,
whose application in terms of section
21(1) has not been adjudicated, is entitled to be issued with an
asylum seeker visa, allowing
the applicant asylum seeker, to sojourn
in the Republic temporarily, subject to such conditions as may be
imposed. On 12 March
2024, Mr K[...] was accorded the entitlements
contemplated in section 22 and was issued with a temporary visa. As
at present, the
application of Mr K[...] has been adjudicated upon.
Where section 22 refers to an applicant, it refers to an applicant
contemplated
in section 21(1)(b) of the Refugee Act.
[23]
Therefore, section 22(1) does not have an
applicant for a judicial review in mind. Such being the present legal
position, where
an application contemplated in section 21 has been
adjudicated, an entitlement to a temporary asylum visa falls away.
This view
is underpinned by a proper read of section 22(4), which
provides that the visa referred to in subsection (1) may, pending the
decision
on the application in terms of section 21, from time to time
be extended for such period as may be required. As pointed out
earlier,
once an application is rejected the asylum seeker loses any
protections in terms of the Refugee Act. Section 21(4) provides that
no proceedings may be instituted or continued against any person in
respect of his or her unlawful entry into or presence in the
republic
if such a person has applied for asylum until decisions contemplated
in section 24, 24A, or 24B have been made. This protection
does not
extend to a situation where a judicial review pends.
[24]
Accordingly, once the Refugee Act
protection evaporates, this Court is not empowered to afford a
supposed asylum seeker any of the
protections in the Refugee Act. In
terms of section 1 of the Refugee Act, asylum means a refugee status
in terms of the Act. An
asylum seeker means a person who is seeking
recognition as a refugee in the Republic. A refugee status is
acquired by a person
who fits the statutory provisions of section
3(a)-(c) of the Act. A decision has already been made that Mr K[...]
does not fit
the statutory requirements in section 3. Therefore, he
is not an asylum or an asylum seeker anymore.
[25]
Resultantly, an order compelling an
extension of a temporary visa is not capable of being made by this
Court. The temporary visa
that was once issued to Mr K[...] has
expired. Expiry refers to a point in time when something comes to an
end or stops being valid.
If that state is reached, extension becomes
impossible. Extension generally refers to something that is added to
make something
longer, larger, or more extensive. Mr K[...] is bound
to fail on this relief.
[26]
Since the applicable law is that, having
gone through the process designed by the Refugee Act, a person must
be dealt with in terms
of the Immigration Act, section 1 of the Act
defines a foreigner to mean an individual who is not a citizen. The
section further
defines an illegal foreigner to mean a foreigner who
is in the Republic in contravention of the Act. Undoubtedly, Mr
K[...] is
a Congolese and not a citizen of the Republic. He is in the
Republic without any documentation permitting him to be in the
Republic,
as such an illegal foreigner. In terms of section 32(1) of
the Immigration Act, an illegal foreigner shall depart unless
authorised
by the Director-General to remain in the Republic pending
his or her application for a status.
Is Mr K[...] entitled
to a final order of an interdict?
[27]
An
interdict is a special discretionary remedy aimed at protecting
protectable rights. As a departure point, a review application
is not
a protectable right, to be insulated by an interdictory relief
[7]
.
In order to obtain a final interdictory relief, an applicant must
demonstrate a clear right. A right to launch a review is not
a right
to be preserved
pendente
lite
.
Mr K[...] seeks to protect a right to fair and lawful administrative
action. As confirmed in
OUTA
,
an interdict is meant to protect future conduct and not decisions
already made. On his own version, his right to fair and lawful
administrative action as guaranteed to everyone in section 33 of the
Constitution, was trampled upon on 27 August 2024. Accordingly
there
is nothing to protect at this stage. The remedy of Mr K[...] is a
review in terms of PAJA or legality and rationality principle
[8]
.
The issue whether or not affording him a French speaking interpreter
amounts to procedural unfairness would be decided in due
course. This
Court expresses its own doubts. The notice of appeal was completed by
manuscript in English.
[28]
Mr
K[...] fears a deportation. Section 34 of the Immigration Act
authorises deportation and detention of illegal foreigners. Should
Mr
K[...] be ultimately deported, the Minister would not be acting
unlawfully thereby. As an illegal foreigner, Mr K[...] is not
entitled to remain in the Republic. Section 32(2) of the Immigration
Act is unequivocal. An illegal foreigner shall be deported.
In
Gool
v Minister of Justice and another
[9]
,
it was confirmed that unless allegations of
mala
fides
are made a Court does not readily interdict the exercise of statutory
powers. The
Gool
decision received an imprimatur in
OUTA
.
[29]
Having failed to demonstrate a clear right
that is to be harmed, Mr K[...] is not entitled to a final
interdictory relief.
Conclusions
[30]
In summary, this Court is satisfied that
the present application deserved to be heard as one of urgency. This
Court is not empowered
to suspend the Form 23. This Court is not
empowered to order the extension of a non-existent temporary asylum
visa. Mr K[...] has
failed to make a case for a final interdictory
relief. Accordingly, the application must fail.
[31]
On account of all the above reasons, I make
the following order:
Order
1.
The application is heard as one of urgency
in terms of Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of this Court. Non
compliance with the Rules
is hereby condoned.
2.
The application is dismissed.
3.
There is no order as to costs.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Mr
B Baliso
Instructed by:
Mapingire &
Associates Inc, Pretoria
Date
of the hearing:
08
April 2025
Date
of judgment:
11
April 2025
[1]
Section
195(1)(f) Public administration must be governed by the democratic
values and principles enshrined in the Constitution,
including the
following principles- (f)
Public
administration must be accountable.
[2]
Act
20 of 1957
[3]
Marked
reportable Case No 144037/2024 handed down on 09 January 2025 (WC)
[4]
Act
13 of 2002 as amended.
[5]
MEC
for Health, Province of Eastern Cape NO and Another v Kirkland
Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a Eye & Laser Institute
2014 (3) SA 219
(SCA) and
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town & others
2004
(6) SA 22 (SCA).
[6]
Act
130 of 1998 as amended.
[7]
See
National
Treasury and others v OUTA
2012 (6) BCLR 1148
(CC) at para 50.
[8]
See
Ithala
SOC Ltd v SARB and others
(010146/2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 784 (14 October 2022) para 14.
[9]
1955
(2) SA 682
(CPD).
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