Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 333South Africa
Mohamud and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 333; 037352/2023 (11 May 2023)
Headnotes
under File Numbers MUSSOM000061014, PTAGHA000220316, PTAETH002660514, VRA/004628/99, PTAETH002360719, PTAETH001631118, PTANGA001650113, PTANGA009010515, PTAEGD004491018, PTAETH000460619
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mohamud and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 333; 037352/2023 (11 May 2023)
Mohamud and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 333; 037352/2023 (11 May 2023)
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sino date 11 May 2023
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 037352/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
SIGNATURE:
DATE:
11/5/2023
In
the matter between:
DURAN
KAHIYE MOHAMUD
First Applicant
SALAMATU
IBRAHIM
Second Applicant
NASIR
ABDELLA
HUSSEN
Third Applicant
MOHAMMED
SABAJ
MIAH
Fourth Applicant
MULUKEN
PAWLOS
LAMBEBO
Fifth Applicant
ROBAL
ABKEY
Sixth Applicant
KABIRU
TUNDE
AKINDELE
Seventh Applicant
PROMISE
OGOMEGBULEM
Eighth Applicant
MD
ROSHIDUL
ISLAM
Ninth Applicant
MAMO
MESERET
DABA
Tenth Applicant
EAR
HOSSAIN
Eleventh Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL: THE DEPARTMENT
OF
HOME
AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
[1]
In this matter eleven Applicants from different parts
of the country
approach the court for urgent relief. They are all asylum
seekers who have three things in common:
1.1
Upon entering South Africa, they applied for asylum.
They were
granted temporary asylum seeker permits but their applications for
asylum were rejected and their subsequent appeals
failed;
1.2
Each of the Applicants then applied for judicial review of
the
decision declining their application for asylum, but these
applications have not been finalised.
1.3
As their permits have expired, each of them faces the daily
risk of
arrest, since they are without papers justifying their presence in
South Africa. Without an extension of their permits,
they are
at risk of arrest and deportation. Without such a permit, they
are not able to seek employment.
[2]
The application was heard on 10 May 2023. The substantive
relief sought in the Notice of Motion, save to have the matter heard
urgently, reads as follows:
“
2.
That the second respondent’s (i.e. The Director General of the
Department
of Home Affairs) failure to make available applicants’
records held under File Numbers MUSSOM000061014, PTAGHA000220316,
PTAETH002660514, VRA/004628/99, PTAETH002360719, PTAETH001631118,
PTANGA001650113, PTANGA009010515, PTAEGD004491018, PTAETH000460619
and PTABDG002671019 which were requested in terms of Section 18(1) of
the Promotion of Access to Information Act, 2000 (Act 2 of
2000)
(PAIA) is reviewed.
3.
An order directing the respondents to make such records available
within 14 (fourteen) days of the order.
4.
An order directing the second respondent to extend the applicants’
asylum seeker temporary visas pending the finalisation of the
judicial review applications under case numbers 18922/2020, 83471/19,
2159/22, 37110/22, 34683/22, 34682/22, 27986/21, 33422/22, 31063/22,
33420/22.
5.
The respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this application on
the party and party scale jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved.”
[3]
At the hearing of the matter counsel for the Applicant
correctly
abandoned the PAIA relief due to the pending applications for
judicial review (sec 7 of Act 2 of 2000). The documents
sought must
be obtained in terms of the Uniform Rules of Court. In none of
the matter mentioned, has the matter progressed
to the stage where
the Rule 53 record has been provided.
[4]
During argument it became apparent that not all the applications
for
judicial review are on record with the State Attorney and that there
may be an issue with the service of the judicial review
applications
referred to in Prayer 4 of the notice of motion.
[5]
The First Applicant recounts his experiences as an asylum
seeker from
Somalia. He came to South Africa in 2014 fleeing Somalia for fear of
persecution. On arrival in South Africa,
he went to the Desmond
Tutu Refugee Reception Office where he was issued with an asylum
seeker temporary visit with reference MUSSOM000061014.
In
December 2019 he went to the Refugee Reception Office in Musina to
extend his Visa and was told that his application for asylum
had been
rejected and that he had to leave the country.
[6]
In March 2020 he sought the assistance of an attorney
who assisted
him in drafting and launching a review application under case number
18922/2020. The review application was
served on the Department
of Home Affairs on 19 March 2020 by service on the State Attorney.
Lockdown then followed and the
Department of Home Affairs extended
all permits which would expired during lockdown and thereafter.
In August 2022 he learned
that the extensions for asylum seeker
temporary permits were now done online. He lodged his
application for the extension
of his permit on 20 September 2022.
He has not received an asylum permit, nor a reply from the Department
of Home Affairs.
[7]
On 15 August 2022 he submitted a PAIA request, requesting
the
documents in his file from the Department of Home Affairs.
[8]
On 25 January 2023 he went to the Musina Refugee Reception
Office to
enquire about his application. He was advised to submit valid
court orders (and not merely a notice of motion)
as well as a valid
notice of set down for the hearing of the review application.
Upon his return he consulted his attorney.
He was advised that
the Respondents had failed to comply with Rule 53 as well as with his
PAIA request.
[9]
His attorneys sent a letter of demand to the Department
of Home
Affairs on 6 February 2023 demanding the record, but there was no
response. The other applicants have similar facts.
[10]
In terms of
Section 27A
of the
Refugees Act, 130 of 1998
an asylum
seeker is entitled to a formal written recognition as an asylum
seeker in the prescribed form, pending finalisation of
his or her
application for asylum. An asylum seeker is further entitled to
remain in the Republic pending the finalisation
of his or her
application for asylum. He further has a right not to be
unlawfully arrested or detained, and has the rights
contained in the
Constitution insofar as they apply to asylum seekers.
[11]
An application for asylum is made in terms of section 21(1)(b) and an
applicant is entitled to an asylum seeker visa pending adjudication
of the application (section 22(1)).
[12]
The rights of asylum seekers served before the Constitutional Court
in
Saidi v Minister of Home Affairs
2018(4) SA 333 (CC).
The Court found (at para [13]) that the
Refugees Act had
the purpose
of preventing the return of asylum seekers to the dangers that they
were fleeing (“non-refoulement”).
[13]
An asylum seeker visa issued to asylum seekers in terms of
section 22(1)
has two purposes. Firstly, it would evidence a
right of the asylum seeker to stay in the Republic of South Africa-
i.e. its
production would avoid arrest as an illegal immigrant.
Secondly, it would enable an asylum seeker to seek employment in
order to
care for his needs. In
Saidi
the question was the
duration of such a visa and whether the Refugee Reception Officer had
a discretion to extend an expired visa
where a judicial review of the
decision to refuse asylum was pending.
[14]
At para [43] the Constitutional Court found that, pending
finalisation
of judicial review, the Refugee Reception Officer
must
extend the permit automatically. In fact, he had no discretion
in this regard (para [42]).
[15]
The Department of Home Affairs opposed the application on the basis
of
a lack of urgency. It was contended that there was an undue
delay and that urgency was self-created. However, refugees with
no
documentary proof evidencing their right to be in South Africa, are
at constant risk of arrest and deportation. Further,
without
documentary proof evidencing their right to be in South Africa, they
could not secure lawful employment. I am satisfied
that the
application is sufficiently urgent as asylum seekers face this risk
on a daily basis. If they were arrested and
deported, any
pending judicial review would be academic. If asylum seekers
were deported in such circumstances, before finalisation
of their
applications for judicial review, it would undermine the
non-refoulement (non- return) purpose of the
Refugees Act.
>
[16]
The Department of Home Affairs contended that it did not have record
of each of the review applications referred to. It expressed a
fear that asylum seekers could abuse their right to extensions
of
their permits by merely issuing judicial review applications, without
any intention of following through on such applications.
[17]
There is a risk of abuse of the process if this were to occur.
An asylum seeker would merely have to prove that there is a judicial
review application pending in order to obtain indefinite rights
to be
present in the Republic. In order to avoid this risk, the
judicial review applications would have to be served on at
least the
State Attorney. Certain of the Applicants have done so.
Having scrutinised the returns of service that they
have filed, it
appears that some of them had served on the Chairperson of the
Refugee’s Appeal Board or on the Chairperson
of the Standing
Committee for Refugee Affairs. Whilst these persons were
Respondents in the application and required service,
the applicants
did not in all instances serve on the State Attorney as well.
[18]
The fact that there are pending judicial review applications, issued
by the Registrar and served by the sheriff on certain of the parties,
is sufficient to entitle the Applicants to the relief they
seek. The
risk of abuse will be averted if the judicial review applications are
served on the Department of Home Affairs by serving
at the State
Attorney. The State Attorney could then monitor progress or lack
thereof and report this to the Department of Home
Affairs.
[19]
I do not fully address the other points on which the Department of
Home
Affairs opposed the application, since none of them have merit.
So, for example, it was contended that the Applicants have
not
complied with
Rule 53
in this urgent application. This
application is however not a
Rule 53
application at all.
Nothing further needs to be said in this regard.
[20]
In the premises, I am satisfied that the Applicants are entitled to
relief.
Upon service of their review applications on the State
Attorney, or proof of service in the past, such Applicants would be
entitled
to an extension of their asylum seeker visas.
[21]
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The Applicants are directed to serve their
applications for judicial
review on the State Attorney, or to supply proof to the State
Attorney of previous service of their application
on the State
Attorney.
2.
The Department of Home Affairs is directed
to extend the asylum
seeker visas of each of the Applicants who has complied with para
[1].
3.
Such extension shall remain valid until finalisation
of their
respective judicial review applications.
4.
The Respondents are ordered to pay the costs
of the application
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.
EC
LABUSCHAGNE AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered:
this judgment was prepared and authored by the judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically and by
circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Case
lines. The date for
handing down is deemed to be 11 May 2023.
APPEARANCES
FOR THE
APPLICANTS:
ADV. N MTHEMBU
FOR THE
RESPONDENTS:
ADV. JM MIHLANGA
HEARD ON:
10 MAY 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11 MAY 2023
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