begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1316
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Ziaul and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (136725/2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1316 (17 December 2024)
Ziaul and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (136725/2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1316 (17 December 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_1316.html
sino date 17 December 2024
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: 136725/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
DATE:
17/12/24
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
HOQ
MD
ZIAUL
First Applicant
ABO TEMESGEN
ALEMU
Second Applicant
UMER HAYAI
AHMED
Third Applicant
AHAMEFULE
IHEANACHO COLLICE
Fourth Applicant
SIWORE
TSEGAYE LEMMA
Fifth Applicant
TEREFA
DANGHEW ABRHMI
Sixth Applicant
MOHAMMAD
YUSHUF
Seventh Applicant
HOSSAIN
MOHAMMAD ISMAEL
Eighth Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL
OF THE
Second Respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME
AFFAIRS
JUDGMENT
Joyini
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant was before this
Court on urgent basis on 10 December 2024, seeking an order in the
following terms: that the application
be treated as urgent and the
court dispense with the normal forms and services in accordance with
the provisions of Rule 6(12);
that the second respondent be ordered
to respond in writing within ten (10) days from the date of the Court
Order, to the applicants’
online applications for the extension
of their temporary asylum seeker visas/permits under the following
numbers: P[...], P[...],
P[...], P[...], P[...], B[...], P[...], and
P[...]; that the second respondent be ordered to extend the
applicants’ asylum
seeker temporary visas within fourteen (14)
days from the date of the Court Order; and that the first and second
respondents be
ordered to pay the costs of this urgent application on
a High Court party and party scale B, including but not limited to
Counsel’s
cost for consultation, preparation and court
appearance jointly and severally the one paying the other to be
absolved.
[2]
The application is unopposed. The
respondents were properly served but opted not to participate in the
proceedings.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[3]
The
applicants, whose country of origin is Bangladesh, have applied
online for the extension of their temporary asylum seeker
visas/permits
under the numbers referred to in paragraph 1 above. The
applicants have since been waiting for the response from the
respondents
without any success despite several follow up letters.
Their permits have since expired putting them at a risk of being
arrested,
detained and deported.
[4]
As an
Asylum Seeker in South Africa, one will be issued a Section
22
[1]
permit which is
normally valid for a period up to six months and legalizes one’s
stay in the Republic of South Africa
temporarily pending a final
decision on one’s application. The permit can be extended by
the Refugee Reception Office while
the process of status
determination is in progress.
[5]
With the
online extension, a holder of an asylum seeker visa (section 22) or a
refugee status (section 24), is able to request an
extension of visa
validity through email, without having to physically go to a refugee
reception office. In terms of process, when
making a request for
online extension, an applicant sends an email message to a dedicated
email address. An applicant will then
receive a response outlining
the process to follow, a template and list of required documents.
Once all documents are sent and
received at Home Affairs, the
Department will consider the request and communicate its decision by
email. In cases where a
request cannot be processed online and
requires that the requester should appear in person at a Refugee
Reception Office, a letter
stating that will be sent. This letter
will provide such a person with the office name, date and time of
their appointment. Applicants
did not get the response.
DISCUSSION AND
ANALYSIS
Urgency
[6]
For all the reasons alluded to by the
applicants in their papers, the application is urgent. The urgency
thereof is triggered by
the fact that t
he
applicants have since been waiting for the response from the
respondents without any success despite several follow up letters.
Another trigger for urgency is the fact that their permits have since
expired putting them at a risk of being arrested, detained
and
deported.
Are the applicants’
asylum applications abandoned?
[7]
In
Scalabrini
Centre of Cape Town and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and
Others
[2]
,
the
unanimous
decision of the Constitutional Court struck down provisions in the
Refugees Act which dictate that asylum seekers who
have not renewed
their visas within one month of the date of its expiry are considered
to have permanently abandoned their asylum
applications.
Acting Judge Ashton Schippers, writing for the Constitutional Court,
said the provisions and a linked regulation, violated a number
of
constitutional rights in that the “
deemed
abandonment”
provisions meant asylum seekers were cut off from essential services.
These included access to banking, education and healthcare.
They also
exposed asylum seekers and their children to the constant risk of
arrest, detention and deportation. “
All
this, simply because a visa has not been renewed,”
said Acting Judge Schippers. I am bringing in this decision because
the applicant’s permits have since expired whilst they
are
waiting for the response from the respondents. This fact makes this
decision relevant.
Is
an extension automatic?
[8]
An asylum seeker is someone who
claims, in an application to the Department of Home Affairs, to have
fled from a place where they
have been persecuted or where they are
in danger. A refugee is someone who has been granted asylum either by
government or a court.
Before asylum seekers get official refugee
status they are granted a temporary permit which allows them to
remain in the country
until their application has been dealt with.
The question that arises is: up to what point is such an extension
allowed? And is
the extension automatic or does a Refugee Reception
Officer have the discretion to refuse an extension?
[9]
In
Saidi
and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[3]
t
he
case before the Constitutional Court was brought by several asylum
seekers from Cape Town whose applications for official refugee
status
had been rejected. After exhausting internal appeals, they applied
for an extension of their temporary permits pending judicial
review.
The extension was not granted. The High Court found that a Refugee
Reception Officer does have the discretion to extend
a permit pending
judicial review. However, the Court found that the extension is not
automatic but at the discretion of the officer.
The Supreme Court of
Appeal largely upheld the decision of the High Court. Home Affairs
appealed to the Constitutional Court to
rule that a Refugee Reception
Officer can only extend a permit until internal remedies in terms of
the Act have been exhausted.
The asylum seekers cross-appealed and
wanted the Constitutional Court to go further than the Appeal Court
decision and find that
an extension is not only permitted but also
automatic. The Constitutional Court explained that two legal issues
had to be addressed:
Whether a Refugee Reception Officer has the
power to extend a permit pending judicial review; and if so, whether
an extension is
automatic or whether the Refugee Reception Officer
must exercise discretion.
[10]
The Constitutional Court also
emphasised that courts must prefer an interpretation of legislation
that protects fundamental rights
in terms of the Bill of Rights. If
Home Affairs’s interpretation were adopted an asylum seeker’s
rights to just administrative
action, access to courts, life, human
dignity, and freedom and security could be infringed. For all these
reasons, the court rejected
Home Affairs’s interpretation and
found that a Refugee Reception Officer does have the power to extend
a permit, pending
judicial review. Here, the court found that the
principle of “non-refoulement” — not sending a
person back to
a place where he or she would be in danger —
would suggest that an extension must be automatic. The court also
said that
if a Refugee Reception Officer did have discretion to
refuse to extend a permit this would create a discrepancy in the Act.
This
is because the Act enables the Minister in certain prescribed
circumstances to withdraw a permit but does not prescribe the
circumstances
under which a decision not to extend a permit may be
made. Yet a refusal to extend a permit and the withdrawal of a permit
have
the same effect. The court found that it would not make sense
that the Act gives more discretion to the Refugee Reception Officer
than to the Minister. So the court found that the only interpretation
that would make sense is that an extension is automatic and
the
Refugee Reception Officer has no discretion at all.
Failure to make a
decision
[11]
In
Mazingane
and Others v Minister of Correctional Services and Others
[4]
,
it was
held:
“
[80]
Under
PAJA, failure to make a decision can also be an administrative
action. The decision is then defined as a decision that is
proposed
or required to be made under an empowering provision. This element of
decision implies a finality in administrative action
and will apply
to the entire process. The Minister’s failure to make a
decision is also an administrative action.
[81]
In
terms of ss 6(2)(g) and s 6(3) of PAJA, a court may review an
“administrative action” – including a failure
to
make a decision – if there is a duty on the administrator to
make a decision and they have not done so.
[83]
In
the instances where there is no time prescribed for making a
decision, the timeframe is “a reasonable time” (i.e.
if
there has been an unreasonable delay as per s 6(3)). This will, of
course, depend on the facts of each case.”
Conclusion
[12]
It is common cause that the respondents have failed to make a
decision by failing to respond to applicants’s
applications
for
the extension of their temporary asylum seeker visas/permits.
[13]
Section
22(1) of the Refugees Act reads: “
The
Refugee Reception Officer must, pending the outcome of an application
in terms of section 21(1), issue to the applicant an asylum
seeker
permit in the prescribed form allowing the applicant to sojourn in
the Republic temporarily, subject to any conditions,
determined by
the Standing Committee, which are not in conflict with the
Constitution or international law and are endorsed by
the Refugee
Reception Officer on the permit.”
[5]
Temporary
permits issued in terms of this section are critical for asylum
seekers. They do not only afford asylum seekers the right
to sojourn
in the Republic lawfully and protect them from deportation but also
entitle them to seek employment and access educational
and health
care facilities lawfully.
[14]
With regard to the caselaw referred to above, I am of the view that
the applicants are entitled to
a response to their applications
for
the extension of their temporary asylum seeker visas/permits.
It is my humble view that this conclusion finds support in the
authorities referred to above. It is also in line with the letter
and
spirit of the Refugees Act. I find that the applicant’s
applications
for the
extension of their temporary asylum seeker visas/permits must
be
considered and extended by the respondents as a matter of urgency.
COSTS
[15]
The applicant has sought a
costs order against the respondents. It is common cause that the
respondents have not participated in
the proceedings. There is no
submission on the papers as to why a cost order should be granted
against the respondents. I am not
persuaded that a cost order should
be granted against the respondents. As such, no order as to costs is
made.
ORDER
[16]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
[16.1]
The
application is declared urgent;
[16.2]
The second respondent is
ordered to respond in writing within ten (10) days from the date of
this Court Order, to the applicants’
online applications for
the extension of their temporary asylum seeker visas/permits under
the following numbers: P[...], P[...],
P[...], P[...], P[...],
B[...], P[...], and P[...];
[16.3
The second respondent is ordered to consider and extend
the
applicants’ asylum seeker temporary visas within fourteen (14)
days from the date of this Court Order; and
[16.4]
No order as to costs.
T
E JOYINI
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the applicants
:
Adv
S.B. Mngomezulu
Instructed
by
:
Jafta
(Lerato) Attorneys
For
the respondents
:
No
appearance
Instructed
by
:
No
appearance
Date of Hearing:
10 December 2024
Date of Judgment:
17 December 2024
This
Judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the Court online
digital data base of the Gauteng Division, Pretoria and by
e-mail to
the Attorneys of record of the parties. The deemed date and time for
the delivery is 17 December 2024 at 10h00.
[1]
Refugees
Act 130 of 1998
.
[2]
(CCT
51/23)
[2023] ZACC 45
;
2024 (4) BCLR 592
(CC);
2024 (3) SA 330
(CC)
(12 December 2023)
[3]
(
CCT107/17)
[2018] ZACC 9
;
2018 (7) BCLR 856
(CC);
2018 (4) SA 333
(CC) (24
April 2018)
[4]
(2024/00411 ; 2024/00414 ; 2024/00353 ; 2024/00360 ; 037664/2022)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1092 (28 October 2024)
[5]
(Section
21(1)
, which is referred to in the quotation, reads: “An
application for asylum must be made in person in accordance with the
prescribed procedures to a Refugee Reception Officer at any Refugee
Reception Office.”)
sino noindex
make_database footer start