Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 431South Africa
Mzoxolo v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (2025-040046) [2025] ZAGPPHC 431 (5 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
5 May 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mzoxolo v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (2025-040046) [2025] ZAGPPHC 431 (5 May 2025)
Mzoxolo v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (2025-040046) [2025] ZAGPPHC 431 (5 May 2025)
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sino date 5 May 2025
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.: 2025-040046
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 5 May 2025
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
MABUSELE
MZOXOLO
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR-GENERAL, DEPARTMENT
OF
HOME
AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
Van der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant (Mr. Mzoxolo) approached the
urgent court for an order directing his release from the Lindela
Deportation Center and
preventing his imminent deportation to his
country of birth, the Democratic Republic of Congo. He first went by
the name of Saidi
Amadu, but is reflected in the national population
register as Mabusela Mzoxolo with identity number 8[...].
[2]
In the founding papers, Mr. Mzoxolo avers
that he was born on 17 February 1986 in the Republic of the Congo. He
came to South Africa
around the year 2000 through the OR Tambo
International Airport shortly after his father passed away. On his
arrival, he was adopted
by Ms. Beth Mabusela, a South African
citizen. She assisted him during 2006 in applying for a South African
identity document,
which was duly issued. He has since started his
own family and is the father of two children.
Urgency
[3]
Mr/ Mzoxolo avers that the application is
urgent because of his imminent deportation. He has been detained at
the Lindela Correctional
Center (Lindela) since 15 December 2024. In
terms of
section 34(1)(d)
of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
he cannot
be detained for more than 120 days before being deported. Due to
financial constraints, he was only able to consult with
his legal
representatives on 28 February 2025. I pause to note at this point
that Mr. Mzoxolo avers that he did not have the necessary
financial
resources because he is unemployed, was living from hand to mouth,
and had no funds in savings. He later averred that
he did not have
access to his bank accounts because of the fact that his identity
document was blocked. This contradiction is significant.
[4]
A supplementary founding affidavit and a
replying affidavit were subsequently filed by Mr. Mzoxolo. The filing
of a supplementary
affidavit was necessary to address certain queries
raised by the court when the application was first enrolled in the
urgent court
in March 2025. A replying affidavit was filed
after the respondents’ (the DHA) opposing papers were filed.
The matter
was again struck from the roll and the court is said to
have taken issue with the fact that a replying affidavit was filed
and
not a supplementary founding affidavit. The supplementary
founding affidavit was subsequently filed, and Mr. Mzoxolo seeks the
incorporation of the replying affidavit to the supplementary founding
affidavit. In order to facilitate the hearing of the matter
and to
obtain as comprehensive a factual matrix as possible due to the
far-reaching effect that deportation will have, I will read
the
replying affidavit as part of the founding papers. The respondents
filed a subsequent supplementary answering affidavit and
will not be
unduly prejudiced by such an approach.
[5]
It suffices to say that Mr. Mzoxolo’s
imminent deportation renders the matter sufficiently urgent to
consider.
The parties’
respective cases
[6]
Mr. Mzoxolo applied for and was issued a
passport in 2014. When he approached the offices of the Department of
Home Affairs to renew
his passport, he was informed that his ID had
been blocked. His identity document was confiscated. He avers that he
was not provided
with prior notice regarding an investigation
regarding his ID, and no reasons were provided to him prior to
blocking his ID. I
pause to note that the court is not informed of
the date on which Mr. Mzoxolo’s identity document was
confiscated or the
specific office of the DHA where it transpired.
[7]
Mr. Mzoxolo says he was informed that he
would be contacted by the Department of Home Affairs in due course.
Mr. Mzoxolo was taken
into custody on 4 November 2024 and transferred
to Lindela on 15 December 2024. Once again, the lack of detail is
significant.
Mr. Mzoxolo fails to inform the court why he was
arrested and what events transpired after his arrest. A judicial
review application
was issued prior to this urgent court application
under case number 2025-035637 for reviewing the decision to block and
confiscate
his identity document.
[8]
I pause to note that Mr. Mzoxolo did not
append the founding affidavit to the review application to his urgent
court application.
It was, however, appended to the respondent’s
answering affidavit. The following facts contained in the founding
affidavit
need to be noted:
a)
He entered the Republic in 2005 through the
OR Tambo International Airport;
b)
Shortly after his arrival, he was adopted
by Ms. Bathabile Mabusela. The adoption was not registered as they
both are laypersons.
[9]
In the supplementary founding affidavit,
Mr. Mzoxolo avers that he did not have access to personal funds as a
result of his detention
and the blocking of his South African
identity number. He was then financially assisted by friends who
assisted him ‘out
of goodwill and concern for the injustice [he
is] suffering.’ As for his adoption, he avers that Ms. Mabusela
took him in
as a minor when he was abandoned after the death of his
biological father and the disappearance of his biological mother. The
adoption
was an informal adoption. Because Ms. Mabusela lives in
rural KwaZulu-Natal Natal a confirmatory affidavit could not have
been
obtained from her.
[10]
In the replying affidavit that is now
incorporated in the founding papers, Mr. Mzoxolo informs the court
again that he has been
in South Africa since 2000. He avers that any
reference to the year 2005 is a typing error. However, he now states
that he arrived
in South Africa with his biological parents and that
his father passed away shortly after arriving in the country. He also
clarified
that he attempted to renew his passport in 2024, which led
to him realising his identity document was blocked.
[11]
Mr. Mzoxolo avers that the
prima
facie
right entitling him to interim
relief is the fact that he is a South African citizen with a South
African passport and South African
identity number issued by DHA. His
identity number has been blocked by the DHA.
[12]
The respondents (DHA) oppose the
application. The DHA informs the court that Mr. Mzoxolo was
convicted for being in contravention
of
section 49(1)(a)
of the
Immigration Act, after
he pleaded guilty to the charges. He was
sentenced to pay a fine of R4000 or to undergo 2 months' direct
imprisonment. In the sworn
statement in terms of
section 112(2)
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, the applicant states that he
left his country of origin in September 2024 with a valid passport,
which got lost when he moved
to a new place of residence.
[13]
Upon his release from the Qalakabusha
Maximum Correctional Facility, the Magistrate signed a confirmation
for his continued detention
pending deportation. The decision to
detain and deport Mr. Mzoxolo was the outcome of a judicial function.
Judicial decisions are
not reviewable under the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
.
[14]
The DHA further informs the court that:
a)
Mr. Mzoxolo’s identity document could
not be verified and was identified as having been fraudulently
obtained;
b)
Mr. Mzoxolo informed immigration officials
that he entered the country on land, not through the OR Tambo
International Airport;
c)
He alluded to having entered the country
for the first time on 7 July 2018 through Zambia, Tanzania, and
Zimbabwe;
d)
He indicated that he had four kids;
e)
The interview records were signed by Mr.
Mzoxolo.
[15]
The DHA submits that Mr. Mzoxolo is not a
South African citizen, he was just found with a South African
identity document. He pleaded
guilty to charges even before he was in
DHA’s custody. The court ordered his detention pending
deportation. He pleaded guilty
and did not make the allegations he is
currently making. The DHA submits that because Mr. Mzoxolo is
detained as a consequence
of being found guilty of contravening
section 49(1)(a)
of the
Immigration Act and
being detained for
deportation as a result of the conviction, his remedy would have been
to appeal the conviction.
[16]
For unknown reasons, Mr. Mzoxolo chose not
to deal with the allegations relating to him pleading guilty in a
court of law of contravening
s 49(1)(a)
of the
Immigration Act, the
contents of his
section 112(2)
statement, or his interview with the
immigration officer in a replying affidavit filed in reply to DHA’s
supplementary answering
affidavit. Mr. Mzoxolo’s affidavits are
void of detail and contain, for the most part, general, vague
statements.
[17]
Section 49(1)(a)
of the
Immigration Act
provides
that anyone who enters or remains in or departs from the
Republic in contravention of this Act, shall be guilty of an offence.
[18]
In the founding papers, no case is made out
that Mr. Mzoxolo’s current predicament is directly linked to
his identity document
being blocked. He was arrested for contravening
s 49(1)(a)
of the
Immigration Act, and
pleaded guilty to the offence.
He even provided an explanation for being in the country without a
valid permit, in that he lost
the valid passport with which he
entered the country. His detention and imminent deportation are the
result of being found guilty
in a court of law. Mr. Mzoxolo does not
indicate why he pleaded guilty to the charge, while the
section 112
statement filed in the criminal case reflects that he was represented
by a legal representative. Mr. Mzoxolo did not play open
cards with
this court in his initial founding affidavit. He refrained from
informing the court that his detention was the consequence
of
pleading guilty to a charge of contravening
s 49(1)(a)
of the
Immigration Act. Additional
shortcomings in Mr. Mzoxolo’s
affidavit include the total lack of detail regarding, among others,
the time allegedly spent
in South Africa that preceded his informal
adoption, and the complete lack of information regarding the alleged
Ms. Mabusele’s
whereabouts.
[19]
Mr. Mzoxolo’s reliance on his
identity document being blocked as sustaining a
prima
facie
right to be granted the interim
relief sought, is contradicted and rendered invalid by the plea of
guilty filed in relation to
the charge of contravening
s 49(1)(a)
of
the
Immigration Act that
led to his conviction. It is not the
blocking of the identity document that led to his detention and
imminent deportation, but
his conviction, which has not been
appealed. Mr. Mzoxolo failed to make out a
prima
facie
right, even if subject to some
doubt, to the relief sought.
[20]
It is trite that a court is bound to
consider an application on the papers filed. In the affidavits filed
in support of this application
a case is not made out for the relief
sought. Mr. Mzoxolo’s application stands to be dismissed.
[21]
Given the consequence of the relief
granted, and considering that Mr. Mzoxolo is unemployed, no costs
order is granted.
[22]
I
pause to note that I indicated during the hearing that the judgment
in this application would be handed down by Friday, 2 May
2025. Since
the annexures annexed to the DHA’s supplementary affidavit were
not clearly legible, I requested hard copies
thereof to be delivered
to me.
[1]
I indicated that the
judgment cannot be finalised until I am provided with the hard
copies. I only received those hard copies today.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The application is considered to be an urgent application and
any non-compliance with the Uniform Rules of Court is condoned.
2.
The application is dismissed.
3.
No order as to costs.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
For the applicant:
Adv. S. Shongwe
Instructed by:
Ngobeni Mamabolo
Inc.
For the respondent:
Adv. LR Pasha
Instructed by:
State Attorney,
Pretoria
Date of the
hearing:
29 April 2025
Date of judgment:
5 May 2025
[1]
An
email was sent to both parties’ respective representatives.
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