Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1321South Africa
Orie v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (136642/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1321 (17 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 December 2024
Headnotes
as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Orie v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (136642/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1321 (17 December 2024)
Orie v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (136642/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1321 (17 December 2024)
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sino date 17 December 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 136642/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
DATE:
17/12/24
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
UCHE
ORIE
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME
AFFAIRS
First Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL
OF THE DEPARTMENT
Second Respondent
OF
HOME AFFAIRS
DEPUTY
DIRECTOR-GENERAL: DEPORTATIONS
Third Respondent
OF
THE 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
respondents be interdicted from deporting him until his status under
the Refugees Act,
[1]
alternatively the Refugees Act as amended by the
Refugees
Amendment Act,
[2
]
has been lawfully and finally determined; that his continuing
detention be declared unlawful; and that the respondents be directed
to release him from detention at Lindela Repatriation Centre, within
five days; and that the respondents be ordered to pay the
costs of
this application.
[2]
The application is unopposed.
The respondents were properly served but opted not to participate in
the proceedings.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[3]
The
applicant, who is a Nigerian national, entered the Republic of South
Africa in June 2016 through an unauthorised port of entry
with an
intention to apply for asylum. He left Nigeria which is his country
of origin due to persecution. Having entered the country,
he was
issued with a temporary asylum permit which was extended several
times. He tried to get his temporary asylum permit extended
in 2023
without any success. On 12 September 2024 he was, in terms of section
34(1) of the Immigration Act,
[3]
arrested
and detained in the East London Police Station for failing to produce
a valid permit. The Magistrate Court in East London
ordered that he
be transferred to the deportation facility around October 2024. He is
currently in detention at the Lindela Repatriation
Centre, awaiting
deportation to Nigeria.
Around
30 October 2024, he filed through his attorney, a judicial review
application at the Pretoria High Court under case
number 2024-124849
reviewing the decision rejecting his asylum application. His attorney
sent a letter of demand to the second
respondent requesting his
release in order to enable him to have access to the internal
remedies afforded by the Refugees Act.
DISCUSSION AND
ANALYSIS
Urgency
[4]
For all the reasons alluded to by the
applicant in his papers, the application is urgent. The urgency
thereof was triggered when
the applicant was arrested and detained.
The applicant has been declared an illegal immigrant and an order for
his deportation
has been issued by the Magistrate Court. The date for
his deportation has not been secured but there is an imminent threat
of deportation.
The applicant stands to suffer prejudice should he be
deported to a country where he is likely to face persecution and
possibly
death. In particular, when his status application has not
been finally determined.
Whether the
Applicant should be deported
[5]
It is the applicant’s claim
that he cannot be deported to his country of origin because he
remains an asylum seeker as his
refugee status has not been finally
determined. In support of this supposition, the applicant relies on
section 2 of the Refugees
Act which he contends protects aspirant
asylum seekers, like him, from deportation to the country of their
origin where they may
be subjected to persecution.
[6]
In defending himself
against the imminent deportation by the respondents, the applicant
invokes the principle of non-refoulement.
He alleges in his papers
that even though his application for asylum was rejected, his refugee
status has not been fully finalised
because he has not exhausted all
his remedies.
As
stated in paragraph 3 above, “
[3]
…
Around
30 October 2024, he filed through his attorney, a judicial review
application at the Pretoria High Court under case number
2024-124849
reviewing the decision rejecting his asylum application. His attorney
sent a letter of demand to the second respondent
requesting his
release in order to enable him to have access to the internal
remedies afforded by the Refugees Act.”
Under these circumstances, it is his
contention that his refugee status remains not fully determined and
he cannot, therefore, in
accordance with the principle of
non-refoulement, be deported.
[7]
The
Constitutional Court in
Ruta
,
[4]
one
of its many cases where the principle of non-refoulement was a
subject matter for determination, held as follows:
"[28]
The right to seek and enjoy asylum means more than merely a
procedural right to lodge an application for
asylum - although this
is a necessary component of it. While States are not obliged to grant
asylum, international human rights
law and international refugee law
in essence require states to consider asylum claims and to provide
protection until appropriate
proceedings for refugee status
determination have been completed.
[29] In sum, all
asylum seekers are protected by the principle of non- refoulement,
and the protection applies as long as the
claim to refugee status has
not been finally rejected after a proper procedure."
[8]
In
another Constitutional Court judgment in
Ashebo
,
[5]
it
was held:
"[29]
until an applicant's refugee status has been finally determined, the
principle of non- refoulment protects
the applicant from
deportation."
[9]
Furthermore, at paragraph 31 of
that judgment, the court expressed itself as follows:
“
The
[non-refoulement] protection applies as long as the claim to refugee
status has not been finally rejected after a proper procedure.
This
means that the right to seek asylum should be made available to every
illegal foreigner who evinces an intention to apply
for asylum and a
proper determination procedure should be embarked upon and
completed. The shield of non-refoulement may
only be lifted
after that process has been completed.”
[10]
The law as it stands is
that
until an applicant’s
refugee status has been finally determined, the principle of
non-refoulement protects her/him from deportation.
[11]
In the premises, the relief
sought by the applicant not to be deported at this stage, holds sway.
There is ample, uncontroverted
evidence, that points to the fact that
the applicant’s refugee status has not been finally determined.
He is protected by
the principle of non-refoulement from deportation
until the process for determining his status has been completed.
Whether
the Applicant should be released from detention
[12]
As regards the release from detention, the
applicant seeks an order declaring his continued detention to be
unlawful. He is, furthermore,
seeking an order that the respondents
be directed to release him from detention at Lindela Repatriation
Centre
in order to
enable him to have access to the internal remedies afforded by the
Refugees Act.
[13]
Section 34(1) of the Immigration Act
provides: “
W
ithout
the need for a warrant, an immigration officer may arrest an illegal
foreigner or cause him or her to be arrested, and shall,
irrespective
of whether such foreigner is arrested, deport him or her or cause him
or her to be deported and may, pending his or
her deportation, detain
him or her or cause him or her to be detained in a manner and at a
place determined by the Director-General.”
[14]
It thus appears that upon
arrest without a warrant, the applicant was taken to the Magistrates’
Court for the confirmation
of his status as an illegal foreigner and
an order for his continued detention and subsequent deportation.
The
question, therefore, is whether the applicant is entitled to be
released from detention upon expressing an intention
to
have access to the internal remedies afforded by the Refugees Act and
his filed judicial review application
whilst
the order of the Magistrate Court that declared him an illegal
immigrant to be detained and subsequently deported, is still
standing.
[15]
It is common cause that
there
is no relief sought on the papers against the order of the Magistrate
Court which confirmed the status of the applicant as
an illegal
immigrant and further ordered his detention and eventual deportation.
Which means that the applicant is detained in
terms of a valid Court
Order. Even if such relief had been sought, this Court, as
constituted, has no authority to set that order
aside.
[16]
The
question of whether a person held in detention for deportation in
terms of section 34(1) of the Immigration Act should be released
pending the finalisation of his/her refugee status, was finally
settled in the Constitutional Court judgment in
Ashebo
,
[6]
where at para 39 of that judgment the Court held: “
Importantly,
regulation 2(2) of the Old Regulations, which perished with the rest
of those regulations when the new Regulations
came into force on 1
January 2020, gave an illegal foreigner who intended seeking asylum
an automatic right to so apply and made
provision for the temporary
release of an illegal foreigner pending the making of an asylum
application. The new Regulations do
not contain a comparable
provision.”
[17]
According
to the court in its judgment, the ordinary wording of regulation 2(2)
was clear. Read with section 22 of the unamended
Refugees Act, once
the intention to apply for asylum was expressed, the person was
entitled to be freed subject to further provisions
of the Refugees
Act. The court found that there are no provisions similar to the old
regulation 2(2) in the new Regulations which
came into operation on 1
January 2020.
[7]
[18]
According
to the Court in
Ashebo
,
there are two sections in the Immigration Act regulating the arrest
and detention of illegal foreigners, namely, sections 34 and
49. Both
sections regulate the illegal entry and stay by non-South African
citizens in the country. However, each has a distinct
purpose.
Section 34 authorises the detention of an illegal foreigner solely
for the purpose of deportation whilst section
49 authorises the
detention of a person where he/she has been charged with a criminal
offence. Section 34 is primarily intended
for deporting illegal
foreigners and detaining them for that purpose whereas section 49
criminalises certain conduct.
[8]
[19]
When
addressing the issue of the unlawfulness of such detention,
[9]
the
Court in its reasoning, presumed that as an illegal foreigner
awaiting deportation or criminal trial for his contravention
of the
Immigration Act, the applicant would have been lawfully detained
under the auspices of section 34 and 49(1)(a) of the Immigration
Act
read with the Criminal Procedure Act.
[10]
[20]
The
Court went further to state that whether the detention was in terms
of section 34 or pursuant to a criminal charge in terms
of section
49, the same question of whether the applicant’s expression of
an intention to apply for asylum entitled him to
be released from
such detention, would arise. The Court held that the answer to such a
question must be answered in the negative
[11]
because: “
The
absence in the legislation of provisions similar to regulation 2(2)
poses an anomalous and highly undesirable scenario that
could result
If an illegal foreigner in the applicant’s position were simply
allowed to remain at large on the mere-say-so
that they seek asylum.
That person would remain undocumented and there would be absolutely
no means of checking whether they indeed
promptly applied for asylum.
There would be nothing to stop them from making the same claim to the
next immigration officer who
encounters them, thus repeatedly
preventing their detention. That is not a result the legislature
could have intended.”
[12]
[21]
A
submission was made on behalf of the applicant that his continued
detention in terms of section 34(1) is unlawful. This assertion
was
supported by referring to the judgment in
Ashebo
whereat
the court alluded, at paragraph 58 of that judgment:
"Section
34 does not create or refer to any criminal offence. Section 34 is
primarily intended for deporting illegal foreigners
and detaining
them for that purpose.
" The
court elaborated further on how the said section may be applied in
instances where an applicant is in detention
by stating that to the
extent that the detention may rest on section 34 it may become
unlawful at some point, once a reasonable
period elapsed with no
effort made on the respondents' part to bring the applicant before a
RSDO for the process envisaged in
section
21(1B)
of
the
Refugees Amendment
Act, read
with
regulation
8(3).
[22]
However
,
Ashebo
is
distinguishable from the present matter in that firstly, in
Ashebo
,
unlike in this matter, the court was dealing with an asylum seeker
who had not as yet applied for the determination of his status,
whereas in the current matter the applicant’s status
application had been rejected. It is in that regard that the court
was of the view that the detention would lapse once a reasonable
period has lapsed with no effort by the respondents to bring the
applicant before a RSDO. Secondly, it does not appear that in
Ashebo
the
detention in terms of
section
34
that
was considered by that Court, was in terms of a Court Order, hence
its finding that the detention would become unlawful
at some point.
In this instance, the applicant’s status as an illegal
foreigner was confirmed by the Magistrate Court that
further ordered
the applicant’s detention and subsequent deportation.
[23]
It
is trite that an order of Court, which is valid, remains in effect
until set aside by a proper forum. Furthermore, it was held
in the
Constitutional Court decision in
Abore
[13]
that
the detention of an illegal foreigner pending the submission of an
application for asylum that is authorised by a Court’s
warrant
of detention is valid as the Court Order must be obeyed until set
aside. This principle will, similarly, find application
in the
circumstances of this current application where the applicant, who
seeks to pursue the internal processes to finally determine
his
refugee status, is detained by an order of a Magistrate’s
Court. Until that order is set aside, the applicant cannot
be
released from detention as he has been lawfully detained.
[24]
In
order to avert an impasse, where an applicant who seeks to follow the
process of establishing whether there was good cause for
the absence
of a visa and an asylum application is yet to occur, is languishing
in detention unable to present himself for such
a process, the
Constitutional Court in
Ruta
[14]
and
Ashebo
opted
to issue an order in terms of section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution.
In terms of the said section, the court found it
a just and equitable
remedy to compel the respondents (in that matter) to facilitate the
applicant’s application for asylum,
failing which to release
him from detention unless he may be lawfully detained under the
Criminal Procedure Act.
[25]
The difference in the
current application is that the applicant is not required to appear
personally before anyone for the remedies
that he seeks to pursue to
finalise his asylum application. Section 24A provides that the
rejected application should be brought
before the Standing Committee.
This actually, is a process that should be undertaken internally
without anything expected from
the applicant. From the papers on
record it is not apparent whether this process has already taken
place or not. If it has not
taken place a letter addressed by the
applicant or his legal representatives will suffice. Similarly, in
terms of section 24B which
entitles the applicant to appeal the
decision of the RSDO, the applicant can with the assistance of his
legal representatives file
the appeal.
[26]
It is also evident that the
applicant’s legal representatives have already filed a judicial
review against the decision. There
is thus no need to issue an order
in terms of section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution like the Court
in
Ruta
and
Ashebo
did.
COSTS
[27]
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
[28]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
[28.1]
The
application is declared urgent.
[28.2]
It is declared that the applicant is, in terms of
section
2
of the
Refugees Act 130 of 1998
, entitled to remain
lawfully in the Republic of South Africa.
[28.3]
The respondents are ordered to refrain from deporting the
applicant
until his status has been determined and finalised.
[28.4]
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]
Act
130 of 1998.
[2]
Act
11 of 2017.
[3]
Act
13 of 2002.
[4]
Ruta
v Minister of Home Affairs
[2018]
ZACC 53
paras
28 and 29.
[5]
Ashebo
v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[2023]
ZACC 16
para
29.
[6]
Ashebo
v Minister of Home Affairs and Others [2023] ZACC 15.
[7]
Para
40.
[8]
Paras
47 and 48.
[9]
Para
56.
[10]
Act
51 of 1977.
[11]
Para
50.
[12]
Para
54.
[13]
Abore
v Minister of Home Affairs and Another
2022
(4) SA 321
(CC).
[14]
Ruta
v Minister of Home Affairs
[2018]
ZACC 52.
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