Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 547South Africa
Ndwandwe v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (31253/18) [2022] ZAGPPHC 547 (19 July 2022)
Headnotes
the decision of the second respondent.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ndwandwe v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (31253/18) [2022] ZAGPPHC 547 (19 July 2022)
Ndwandwe v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (31253/18) [2022] ZAGPPHC 547 (19 July 2022)
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sino date 19 July 2022
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISON,
PRETORIA)
Case
No: 31253/18
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED.
In
the matter between:
GIFT
SANDILE NDWANDWE
APPLICANT
And
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
DIRECTOR-GENERAL
SECOND RESPONDENT
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
PATRICK
LOUIS DU PLESSIE
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
NQUMSE
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for the review and setting aside of the
decision of the respondents to
the effect that the applicant is a
Zimbabwean National, and thus a prohibited person in the country.
[2]
Furthermore, the applicant seeks to have a decision that he must
leave the country within 14 days
thereof reviewed and set aside.
[3]
The applicant alleges in his founding affidavit that he was born on
31 January 1981 in Kwazulu
Natal to a Mr Solaho Ndwandwe. According
to information received from his father, his mother is a Ms Gumbi who
used to work with
his father in a farm in Pongolo and later worked in
Durban as a migrant domestic worker where the applicant was born. He
states
that he does not have further particulars of his mother since
he had to fend for himself from a very young age.
[4]
However, in paragraph 7 of the founding affidavit, he states that his
mother informed him that
she left his father at the said farm. He
thereafter embarked on a journey to search for his father and located
him at Mtubatuba.
They were both overjoyed by their reunion. He was
thereafter taken to Zitike Primary School where he commenced with his
basic education.
[5]
He further stated that on 04 August 2004, he was taken by his father
to apply for an Identity
Document (ID) at the offices of Home Affairs
in Mtubatuba. He was thereafter issued with a green bar-coded ID
bearing a reference
number [....]. A copy of the ID was annexed
to the founding affidavit as Annexure “A”.
[6]
The applicant further maintains that he is a South African by virtue
that one of his parents is
a South African citizen and the fact that
he possessed a South African ID. A copy of the ID of his father is
annexed to the founding
affidavit as annexure “B”.
Furthermore, on 18 August 2009 he got married to Busisiwe Beverly
Ngubane and their marriage
was solemnized by an officer of the first
respondent after verifying their ID documents. A copy of the marriage
certificate as
annexed to the founding affidavit as Annexure “C”
out of his marriage with Busisiwe they gave birth to two children
whose birth certificates were annexed as “D” and “E”.
[7]
Applicant further states that somewhere in June 2017 the third
respondent embarked on investigations
into his status in the country,
in which it is alleged that he obtained his ID fraudulently. His
response to the investigation
was that he had been issued with an ID
in 2004 and subsequently in 2007 he was issued with two South African
passports and his
documents were never objected to when he presented
them at check points of his travel. Neither has he experienced any
difficulty
when he travelled to Botswana, Swaziland as well as
Zimbabwe using the said passports.
[8]
On 03 October 2017 he attended a call in the offices of the third
respondent where he was informed
that his names are not ‘Gift
Sandile Ndwandwe’ but ‘Nkululeko Nkomo’ and was
further informed that he will
be deported to Zimbabwe since he is a
Zimbabwean nationality. He was subsequently taken to Pretoria Central
Police Station for
detention and on 06 October 2017 he appeared at
the Pretoria Magistrate’s Court where he was released from
detention by the
order of the magistrate.
[9]
On 10 October 2017, he made representations to then Acting
Director-General of Home Affairs. On
15 November 2017 he received the
outcome of his representations from the second respondent who
maintained that his ID was obtained
fraudulently and was declared a
prohibited person and was consequently ordered to leave the country
within 14 days thereof.
[10]
On 29 November 2017, he made an application to the first respondent
to reconsider the decision of the second
respondent in terms of
Section 8(6)
of the
Immigration Act of 2002
. He further pointed out
to the first respondent that he was suspicious of certain documents
that may have been placed before her
by the Immigration Officer as
false. He further disputes having signed such documents. It is also
not true that the documents were
commissioned by a certain warrant
officer of the South African Police Service (SAPS) in his presence.
[11]
On 14 February 2018, he received the outcome of the first respondent
which confirmed and upheld the decision
of the second respondent.
[12]
Aggrieved by the decision of the first respondent he believes that
his rights have been violated and eroded.
He maintains that there are
reasons that justify the court to review and set aside the decision
of the first respondent acting
in terms of Section 6 of the Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
[13]
It is further contended by the applicant that the investigations into
his status as a citizen were motivated
by personal and political
considerations. That the conduct and threats made by the third
respondent during his interview and the
signing of documents which
were never explained to him is unfair. Applicant further states that
he was not given an opportunity
to respond to the information that
was considered by the respondents. He therefore contends that the
actions of the third respondent
were biased or could be reasonably
suspected to be biased and failed to take into account relevant
information, instead chose to
believe allegations not backed up by
credible evidence and in turn rejected his version.
[14]
The applicant referred in his founding affidavit to legal principles
based on certain pieces of legislation
which ordinarily will be best
suited in argument.
[15]
He further stated that he is a factual citizen since both his parents
were South Africans. However, in the
following paragraphs of his
founding affidavit he relies on a number of statutes to establish his
citizenship which are the British
Nationality in the Union and
Naturalisation and Status of Aliens Act 18 of 1926, the Admission of
Persons to the Union Regulation
Act 22 of 1913, South African
Citizenship Act 44 of 1949, the
South African Citizenship Act 88 of
1995
, the South African Citizen Amendment Act 17 of 2010.
Furthermore, the respondents did not consider his family particularly
what
is in the best interest of his children in reaching their
decision.
[16]
According to the applicant this is in violation of the international
conventions which South Africa is a
signatory of, that the family
unit which needs to be protected by society and the state and that no
one should be subjected to
arbitrary or unlawful interference with
his privacy, family or home.
[17]
Applicant further states that after he had lost his ID he approached
the respondent’s Regional Offices
to apply for a new Smart Card
which came with the country of origin as “ZWE”. Whilst he
was assured by the official
of the respondents that it is a mistake
that will be rectified, it was never rectified instead the
respondents maintain that he
is a Zimbabwean national.
[18]
Solaho Ndwandwe (hereinafter referred to as Tat’Ndwandwe)
deposed to a confirmatory affidavit in which
he confirms the contents
of the founding affidavit.
[19]
In a supplementary affidavit the applicant mentioned that in the
Gauteng High Court under case number 7442/2018,
the court ordered the
appointment of a curator to investigate and file a report on the
effect of the applicant’s deportation
on his children. Advocate
Kerry Howard, who compiled a report recommended that due to the
impact his deportation would have on
the children, he should remain
in the country. A copy of the report is annexed to the supplementary
affidavit as Annexure “G”.
[20]
Applicant further stated that he is continually harassed through
social media by the third respondent who
is used by certain elements
within the South African Transport and Allied Workers Union (SATAWU)
to advance their political agenda
against him.
[21]
In the answering affidavit by Patrick Louise Du Plessie, the
respondents first took issue in the non-disclosure
by the applicant
of the relevant litigation history of this matter prior to the
present application. He revealed that according
to a notice of motion
of 02 November 2017 and issued out of this court under case number
7527/17, the applicant had brought an
urgent application wherein he
sought, inter alia, for an order directing the respondents to unlock
the ID with reference number
[....] which had been issued to
the applicant. Further, interdicting the respondents from arresting,
detaining and deporting
the applicant pending the internal review
proceedings. The urgent applicant was dismissed with costs. A copy of
the Order was annexed
as Annexure “AA1”.
[22]
In a second notice of motion issued out of the Gauteng Local Division
of the High Court, under case number
7442/18 on 22 February 2018, the
applicant brought an urgent application in which he sought, inter
alia, the following relief:
“
1………
2………
3. Prohibiting the
Minister of Home Affairs from arresting and/or deporting the
applicant pending the finalisation of a judicial
review of the First
and Second Respondent’s decision to declare the Applicant as a
prohibited person “in terms of
Section 29(1)(f)
of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
and/or
3.2
Prohibiting the Minister of Home Affairs and the Director-General of
the Department of Home Affairs
from arresting and/or deporting the
Applicant unless and until the Applicant’s Identity under the
South African Citizenship Act (Act
88 of 1995) (“the
Citizenship Act”) or status under the
Immigration Act (Act
13
of 2022) (“the
Immigration Act&rdquo
;) has been lawfully and
finally determined.
3.3
Ordering the Minister of Home Affairs and the Director-General of the
Department of Home Affairs
to unlock the Applicant’s identity
document pending the judicial review mentioned in paragraph 3.1
herein
”. After the application was argued before Fischer J,
on 13 April 2018 the application was dismissed with costs.
[23]
The respondents contend that the failure by the applicant to disclose
the previously failed applications
is intended to mislead this court
and it’s an exercise of “forum shopping” in which
the court should draw a negative
inference from the conduct of the
applicant.
[24]
According to the respondents, based on information
received during early June 2017, the respondents commenced
with
investigations on the citizenship status of the applicant. The
outcome of those investigations established the following:
[24.1]
That whilst the particulars of the applicant are appearing on the
population
register of the respondents, there exists no hard copies
of source documents which would have contained the information
relating
to the applicant.
[24.2]
That the birth of the applicant in South Africa does not exist as the
“B1-24” document which is issued under
Regulation 6(9)
of
the Regulations under Birth and Deaths Registration Act, Act 51/1992
cannot be traced and does not appear on the population
register.
Respondent contends that it is only by the completion and
registration of the “B1-24 form” that the applicant
could
have been with a birth certificate and thereafter with an identity
number identifying him as a citizen or permanent resident
of the
Republic of South Africa.
[24.3]
Du Plessie further stated that when the applicant had visited his
office
on 25 August 2017, the applicant deposed to an affidavit in
which he confirmed that he was born in Zimbabwe on 23 January 1981.
The affidavit was read out to the applicant, in the presence of his
attorney, Mr Jafta, and was thereafter commissioned by an official
in
the department of the respondents. However, his director suggested
that the affidavit be commissioned by a more independent
commissioner. As a result, the applicant was caused to re-sign a
typed version of the affidavit at the Pretoria Central Police
Station
and had it commissioned there.
[25]
Notwithstanding the two affidavits in which the
applicant confirms that he was born in Zimbabwe, in his application
for an ID card he declared that he was born in Durban.
[26]
The respondents contend that the particulars on the face of the
applicant’s ID card in which it is
recorded that his country of
birth is Zimbabwe, as well as the recordal of his country of birth as
Zimbabwe in his ID card application
attached as “AA9” and
his citizenship status form (Form B1-529) annexed on “AA11”
are factors which according
to the respondents, are in line with the
two affidavits which the applicant had deposed to, wherein he stated
that he was born
in Zimbabwe.
[27]
Du Plessie also stated that on 31 July 2017 whilst in
his office, the applicant furnished him with a letter from
the
principal of Zitike Primary School, “the school” dated 28
July 2017 which is to the effect that the applicant was
a learner of
the said school during the period January 1995 to December 1995.
Attached to the principal’s letter was a copy
of the school’s
register which reflected the applicant’s date of birth as 31
January 1991. The school register further
revealed that the
applicant’s admission at the school as 19 January 1995. The
copy of the school register was annexed as
“AA13”.
[28]
It is further stated that, a Mr Kwazi an official of the respondents
went to the school and demanded access
to the original school
register. His request was granted and he took a photograph of the
register which was attached as Annexure
“AA15”. An
enlarged copy of the photograph taken from the register reflects the
details of the applicant against a
Gift Sandile Ndwandwe with a date
of birth as 09 January 1992. It also reflected the aforesaid ‘Gift’
as having been
admitted at the school some time during 1999 when he
was 7 years of age.
[29]
The respondents contend in their affidavit that the document
(Annexure AA14) which was attached to the Principal’s
letter
was tempered with in that all the dates of birth of the persons whose
names appear on that page of the register were tampered
with so as to
amend dates of birth from the mid 1990’s to the early 1980’s.
It is also contended that the dates of
admission were also tempered
with.
[30]
As a result of the alleged fraudulent conduct by the school or the
applicant or a combination of both, the
respondents stated that it
received another letter dated 10 August 2017 from the Vice-Principal
of the school confirming that one
Sandile Ndwandwe’s date of
birth was in fact 1992 but had attended the school in 1995. A copy of
the letter of the Vice-Principal
was attached as Annexure “AA17”.
According to the respondents the information of the Vice-Principal is
also incorrect
since it suggests that the applicant would have been 3
years old when he was registered at the school. Whilst on the
applicant’s
version he would have been 14 years old when he was
registered at the school.
[31]
The improbabilities, as contended by the respondents, that appear on
the different version relating to the
admission dates of the
applicant at the school must be treated with caution. Respondents
also contend that a similar caution has
to be applied to the first
affidavit of Tat’uNdwandwe. This is owing to a subsequent
affidavit which he deposed to when he
was visited and interviewed by
Msibi on 05 August 2017 wherein in paragraph 5 and 6 thereof it
reads:
“
5. I can also
confirm that our chief does not know Sandile. I know Sandile works in
Johannesburg but I do not know that is doing
there. (sic)
6. Insofar as I know
Sandile’s mother was a South African. The only proof that I
have that Sandile is my son is that he came
looking for me and
confirmed that his mother’s surname is Gumbi”.
The
affidavit was attached as Annexure “AA19”. Msibi further
contacted Tolakele Musi a daughter of Tat’uNdwandwe
who
informed him that she did not know Gift Sandile Ndwandwe. Msibi’s
confirmatory affidavit was attached as Annexure “AA28”.
[32]
Du Plessie further gave a chronological account of the attendance of
the applicant at the respondents’
offices as well the exchange
of correspondence between their office and the attorneys of the
applicant. Since the account is ostensibly
a repetition of the facts
alluded above, I do not find it necessary to traverse the same
historical facts, save that according
to the Movement Control System
(MCS), a database utilised by the respondent to record all movements
of persons into and out of
the Republic of South Africa, it shows the
applicant to have regularly exited RSA from the Beitbridge border
post entering into
Zimbabwe. An extract of the MCS was attached as
Annexures “AA20” and “AA21”. A copy of the
applicant’s
passport with the number [....] which reflects the
aforementioned trips into Zimbabwe was also attached as Annexure
“AA22”
[33]
The respondents contend that in light of the evidence of
the applicant’s movement, the applicant is a Zimbabwean
and has
misled a number of people into believing that he was a South African
by birth. The documentation issued to him was obtained
fraudulently
and he falls foul of the
Immigration Act. As
a result he was issued
with a
Section 8(1)
Notice of the Act to the effect that he was found
to be an illegal foreigner.
[34]
The respondents stated that after the receipt of the
Section 8(1) Notice the applicant should have lodged a review
to the
Minister of Home Affairs acting in terms of Section 8(1) (b) of the
Act, instead he opted to file a review against the finding
of the
second respondent in terms of Section 8(4) of the Act, a procedure
which was inappropriate and incorrect. That notwithstanding,
the
Minister
ex abundante cautela
, considered the appeal that was
lodged by the applicant and upheld the finding of the second
respondent. Following the decision
of the Minister the applicant
filed a further review in terms of Section 8(6) of the Act against
the finding of the first respondent
for upholding the findings of the
Immigration officer to the effect that the applicant is an illegal
foreigner. The Minister once
more upheld the findings that the
applicant is an illegal foreigner. Copies of the decision of the
first respondent and the Minister
are attached as Annexures “AA24”
and “AA25”.
[35]
Du Plessie also stated that the allegations made in his affidavit
into the allegations of the applicant’s
status are the same
allegations he had made in the applicant’s previous application
in the Johannesburg High Court which
was dismissed on 23 April 2018.
Subsequent to that judgement, he served a notice to appeal that
judgment which is yet to be prosecuted.
Instead he has now chosen to
launch the present application.
[36]
The respondents had initially in their answering affidavit took a
point in limine
on
res judicata
which was subsequently
abandoned when the matter was before court for argument. I shall
therefore not deal with the merits of the
point in
limine
as I
am not expected to make a pronouncement thereon.
[37]
According to the respondents, they contend that in terms of Section
32 of the Act, it
ex lege
obliges the Minister to deport
illegal foreigners and no decision is required to be taken for her
action. The applicant, so it
was contended, has made no reference to
the decision allegedly taken by the Minister nor the date of such
decision. If the applicant,
relies on the document marked as “AA26”
which was served on his attorneys as a purported decision taken, that
document,
so it was contended, flows from the provisions of Section
32(1) of the Act, read with Regulation 30 (4) and it has nothing to
do
with any decision for the applicant to leave the country. It was
therefore contended that there is no decision that needed to be
reviewed. Du Plessie also stated that in any event the 180 day within
which an application for review had to be brought had elapsed
and the
application for review is not accompanied by any condonation
application.
[38]
Du Plessie stated that, the obligation of the first respondent was
limited only to find whether the correct
appeal had been followed
against the finding he had made that the applicant is an illegal
foreigner, a decision he took in terms
of Section 8(1) of the Act.
[39]
He further referred to paragraph 28 of the applicant’s second
founding affidavit wherein he alleged
as follows:
“
28. A week or
so after my telephone conversation with Mr Du Plessie, I went to
KwaZulu Natal, collected the documents as advised
and thereafter went
to see Mr Du Plessie in his office. He then conducted and interviewed
me during which he asked me questions
such as:
28.1 ------------
28.2 Who is your
mother: (I answered that I do not know as I have only lived with my
father).
[40]
Du Plessie contends that the allegations in paragraph 28 must be
contrasted with the allegations in paragraph 5.1 of the applicant’s
urgent application he had launched and dismissed by Raulinga J, where
the applicant made the following allegations.
“
5.1 in (sic)
was born on 31 January 1981 to a Mr Solahu Ndwandwe, my father and Ms
Gumbi, my mother in Durban or Mtubatuba in Kwa-Zulu
Natal Province.
My father believes that I was born in Durban as my mother was a
migrant domestic worker in Durban around the time
I was born (sic).”
In
paragraph 5.3 of the same affidavit the applicant stated:
“
5.3 My mother
had informed me that she had left my father at the above farm, I then
decided to look for my father and be with my
family. I commenced my
search in Kwa-Msane Reserve, Mtubatuba, Kwa-Zulu Natal Province.
”
He denies the allegations made in paragraph 6, 7, 8 and 9 of the
answering affidavit. The ID application of the applicant
was made in
June not August 2004 as alleged. This is not withstanding that there
is no record of the late registration of the applicant’s
birth
certificate in the offices of the respondent. Therefore, so it
was contended, without an ID document in terms of the
Identification
Act; the respondent disputes the validity of the South African ID
which was received by the applicant.
[41]
According to Du Plessie, no verification of ID document is done prior
to the conclusion of a marriage, therefore,
that the applicant
entered into a marriage with a South African citizen is of no
consequence.
[42]
In dealing with the disputed signatories of the documents by the
applicant as alleged in paragraph 27 of
his founding affidavit, Du
Plessie made contrast with what the applicant had said in his
replying affidavit of his second application
which was allegedly made
before Du Plessie in 25 August 2017 wherein it was stated:
“
29.2 While I
confirm that I deposed to the hand-written affidavit found at page 54
of my founding papers, I deny that I did so willingly.
The affidavit
is part of “GSN14” page 39 of my founding papers) (but
still bears the initial marking “GSN2”)
which are
representation sent by my erstwhile attorneys to the First Respondent
on 30 November 2017. I only signed that hand-written
affidavit as a
result of the pressure that I had been subjected to by Mr Du Plessie;
the deponent in the Respondent’s answering
affidavit.”
[43]
However, Du Plessie denies that there was any pressure placed on the
applicant when he signed the affidavit
as this was done in the
presence of his attorney. He asked the court to draw negative
inferences on the versions of the applicant
that are at variance with
each other. He further denies the allegations in the preceding
paragraphs of the applicant’s affidavit
and reiterates his
contention that the applicant is a Zimbabwean National. He also does
not see the relevance of the claim of citizenship
under the Union
National Flags Act of 1927 since the applicant alleges that he was
born in the Republic of South Africa. He also
referred to the
contradictions in the averments by the applicant, where in paragraph
3 of his affidavit dated 25 August 2017 which
is annexed as “AA5”
he alleged that his mother was a Zimbabwean.
[44]
He disputes the allegations contained in the confirmatory affidavits
of Solahe Ndwandwe, Pretty Ngenzi Mamaba,
Nhlanhla Ndwandwe, Angel
Boniwe Mbuyazi and Sipho Derrick Gwala.
[45] In
reply the applicant first addressed the late filing of the reply
affidavit. In his application for condonation,
he stated that he felt
ill when he was supposed to consult his attorney for purposes of the
replying affidavit. As soon as he recovered
from his ill-health, he
sought to consult with his attorney whose offices were closed for the
Easter holidays.
[46] In
support of his allegation he appended a medical certificate as
confirmation of his condition on the said
period.
[47]
The application is late by a period of 4 days. In my view the
explanation is satisfactory and plausible and
no prejudice will be
suffered by the respondents. Therefore, it is in the interest of
justice for the replying affidavit to be
allowed.
[48] A
point
in limine
relating to the late filing of the answering
affidavit by the respondents absent a condonation application was not
pursued any
further and was effectively abandoned. I shall therefore
not consider same as I am not expected to pronounce thereon.
[49]
The applicant states that the application under case number 75279/17
which was brought on an urgent basis
before Raulinga J was for the
unblocking of his ID document and has no relevance to the present
application which is intended to
challenge the decision that he is a
Zimbabwean. Further, the said application was not dismissed but
struck off the roll due to
lack of urgency. He further denies that he
informed Du Plessie on 25 August 2017 that he was born in Zimbabwe.
The meeting of the
said date was attended by his erstwhile attorney,
Lerato Jafta together with Busisiwe Ngubane-Ndwandwe and Luvuyo
Jordan. He denies
the presence of Mathews Motendi in the said
meeting.
[50] He said
the third respondent turned down his request to have the Zimbabwean
consulate determine whether his status
is that of a Zimbabwean or
not: Instead Du Plessie made the following remark “
you must
resign from SATAWU and if you resign, you will go in peace because I
am about to destroy your life, and will make you lose
your job, your
colleagues don’t want you
.” He also stated that the
allegations of Kwazi Msibi to the effect that he is not known by his
half-sister are not supported
by any confirmatory affidavit from him.
[51] He
maintains that he followed all the procedures relating to the
obtaining of his ID document and is also
aware of instances when the
department had issued ID documents to applicants without there being
any late registration of births
and/or issuing of Birth Certificates.
He also stated that whilst admitting that there was a pending matter
in the Labour Court
between himself and SATAWU (his erstwhile
employer) he is surprised how that matter came to the attention of
the third respondent,
except that it is proof that the third
respondent carries instruction from SATAWU to get rid of him.
[52]
The issues for determination by this court as I see them are:
1.
Whether the application to review and setting aside of the decision
of the respondents to the effect
that the applicant is a Zimbabwean
and thus an illegal foreigner is competent under PAJA, and
2.
Whether the decision for the applicant to leave the country (RSA)
should be reviewed and set aside.
[53] In
his heads of argument the applicant spent a great deal with reference
to the Union Nationality and Flags
Act; the British Nationality in
the Union and Naturalisation and status of Aliens Act; the admissions
of persons to the Union Regulations,
the
South African Citizenship
Act, the
Old Citizenship Act, the amendments to the Citizenship Act
as well as the New Citizenship Act, as references to prove that the
father of the applicant is a South African.
[54] I
must hasten to say that there has not been any challenge to doubt or
dispute Tat’ uNdwandwe’s
citizenship as a South African.
The question that begs an answer is whether the applicant has
succeeded to establish the fact that
he was born by Tat’uNdwandwe
and is consequently a South African by birth as envisaged in the
Citizenship Act, Act 88 of
1995 as amended.
[55]
The applicant argued that the procedure followed by the respondents
to deprive him of his citizenship is
an affront to the provisions of
PAJA, more especially the provisions under section 6 thereof.
Furthermore, the applicant was deprived
an opportunity to properly
address the allegations of fraud against him, neither was he afforded
an opportunity to explain why
he should not be deported. It was also
contended in the heads of argument that the respondents did not
provide the applicant with
the means to obtain necessary documents
that could confirm his status.
[56]
Since there is no evidence to support the allegation from the
applicant that the third respondent had unlawfully
derived a benefit
in his conduct by communicating to parties outside the department
regarding his matter and evidence that he was
instructed to resign
from his employer (SATAWU), those allegations ought to be rejected as
false. It was further argued that the
enquiry held with the applicant
to determine his citizenship was flawed since it ought to have been
conducted in a form of a trial,
with the applicant afforded the right
to present evidence and be allowed to cross-examine witnesses of the
respondent as well as
the opportunity to present arguments on the
law. The applicant relied in this regard on a number of authorities,
for this proposition,
notably,
Du Preez and Another v Truth and
Reconciliation Commission
1997 (3)
SA 2004 at 231I-233H,
233F-234A.
[57]
The applicant further argued that the only person who could shed
light on his registration or non-registration
of birth is his mother
who is untraceable.
[58]
The thrust of applicants’ contention to have the respondent’s
decisions set aside can be summarized
as follows:
58.1. The third
respondent is not empowered by law to make a decision that deprives
the applicant of his citizenship. The decision
taken by the third
respondent is in contravention of section 6 (2) (a) (i) of PAJA;
58.2. The third
respondent did not follow a fair procedure when he conducted the
investigations against the applicant in conflict
with section 6 (2)
(b) of PAJA;
58.3. The respondents
should not have required of the applicant to prove his citizenship
status after 13 years since 1994;
58.4. The respondents
cannot maintain that the applicant’s perceived inability to
prove the case of his citizenship equates
to fraud or
misrepresentation; and
58.5. There was no basis
for the respondents to reject the evidence that the applicant and his
father were born in South Africa.
[59] In
its heads of argument the respondent has aptly explained the
framework of the Act which defines in section
1 thereof an illegal
foreigner, as a foreigner who is in the Republic in contravention of
the
Immigration Act. In
section 41
(1) the immigration officers are
empowered to investigate suspected illegal foreigners and in
section
8
(1), the immigration officer has the authority to find one to be an
illegal foreigner.
[60] It
was submitted on behalf of the respondents that the Act provides two
distinct and separate review or appeal
processes which are a review
to the Minister in terms of section 8 (1) (b) and a review to the
Director General in terms of section
8 (4).
[61]
The respondent further argued that the representations which were
made by the applicant on 10 October 2017
to the Director-General
against the findings of the immigration officer made on 4 October
2017 were incorrectly made. Similarly,
the representations which were
made to the Minister on 29 November 2017 to appeal the decision of
the Director-General to uphold
the immigration officer’s
findings were also incorrectly made.
[62] It
is clear in terms of the
Immigration Act that
an immigration officer
is empowered to investigate an allegation that a person is an illegal
foreigner and make such determination.
Therefore, the officers of the
respondent cannot be faulted for conducting the investigation against
the applicant as contended
by the applicant. Based on the evidence
presented before court there is no shred of evidence that they acted
in a bias manner nor
do I find that they were advancing the course of
SATAWU (when doing so). The applicant has in own version stated that
the allegation
is based on suspicion. No evidence was presented to
substantiate the claim that the officers of the respondent derived an
undue
benefit for their investigations.
[63]
The argument that the applicant was not afforded a fair chance to
prove his citizenship is not borne out
by the facts. Nor is there any
justification for the allegation that he was denied an opportunity to
address the circumstances
surrounding his alleged acquisition of
citizenship and the relevant documents that were issued from the
offices of the respondents.
On the contrary, the applicant on 31 July
2017 furnished the third respondent with a letter from Zitike Primary
School as support
for his claim that he was born in South Africa,
this letter was accompanied by a whole host of other documents in
which the applicant
sought to prove his citizenship.
[64]
The applicant has opted to steer clear from responding to the
allegations in the answering affidavit of the
exchange of emails
between the third respondent and his attorney, Mr Jafta in which the
said Jafta undertook to furnish the third
respondent with the
statement of applicant in which he must explain where he was born and
to furnish his mother’s details
and any other documents that
can substantiate his claim as a South African Citizen.
[65] It
has to be noted that the correspondence of 4 August 2017 from the
third respondent, specifically alleged
in its first paragraph that
the applicant was a Zimbabwean by birth. This allegation required a
precise and clearer response from
the applicant in the statement that
was awaited from him but was never issued by the applicant. Instead
the applicant, through
his attorney provided many excuses that caused
him not to make available such statement until his arrest two months
later. The
allegation by the applicant that he was not afforded a
fair opportunity to address his claim that he was a South African
cannot
be sustained. Nor can there be any merit in the allegation
that the conduct of the third respondent falls short of the
provisions
of PAJA, and therefore warranting the actions of third
respondent to be reviewed and set aside.
[66]
This brings me to an important aspect which the applicant has avoided
to address in his reply. Whilst he
admits having attended a meeting
together with his attorney, Mr Jafta in the officer of the third
respondent, he nevertheless steers
clear from addressing the
allegation that he deposed to an affidavit to which he appended his
signature whilst in the presence
of his attorney in which he stated
that he was born in Zimbabwe whilst under duress. If the account of
the applicant is what transpired.
The question that has to be asked,
what was the reaction of his attorney when he was subjected to depose
to a statement through
force or unlawful means. This is not a lot to
ask from the applicant, since it can reasonably be assumed that the
purpose he hired
an attorney to be present in his interview with the
third respondent was to advise him and guard his legal interests and
also to
ensure that his constitutional rights are protected.
[67]
Neither has the applicant saw it necessary to cause Jafta to depose
to an affidavit in which she confirms
the violation of the rights of
her client and what her reaction was, upon seeing that her client was
forced into making an affidavit
or a statement which was sought
illegally.
[68] In
reply to the serious allegations made in paragraph 5 of the answering
affidavit, the applicant simply
brushes those allegations aside by
stating that he denies each and every allegation. He continues to
allege that he was a learner
at Zitike Primary School and refutes any
allegations that Tat’ u Ndwandwe was not his father. He
deliberately avoids to deal
with the gravamen of the allegations made
in paragraph 28 of his second application’s founding affidavit
wherein he answered
and said that he does not know his mother, since
he has only lived with his father. However, as pointed out by the
respondent,
the averment in paragraph 28 is in contrast with the
allegation in paragraph 5.3 of the founding affidavit in the urgent
application
before Raulinga J, wherein the applicant alleged that he
was informed by his mother that she left his father (applicant’s)
at the farm.
[69] As
alluded above the applicant did not even attempt to explain the
contradictions in his affidavits. Instead
he denies that they are
contradicting each other. Similarly, the applicant failed to address
the information from the MCS in which
it is recorded that he has on a
number of occasions exited the republic through the borders to enter
Zimbabwe. The frequent movements
of applicant from South Africa to
Zimbabwe leads to a reasonable conclusion that the applicant has ties
and conducts relations
with the country of Zimbabwe and its people.
[70]
It is trite that the purpose of a replying affidavit is to deal with
the averments made by the respondent
in an answering affidavit
[1]
.
An applicant who fails to respond to the allegations and averments in
the answering affidavit of the respondent does so at his
own
peril
[2]
.
[71]
Being faced with the factual allegations in the answering affidavit
of the respondents and which have not
been dealt with by the
applicant in his replying affidavit bar a bare denial, attracts the
well-known Plascon Evans
[3]
rule
test in terms of which the version to be accepted is that of the
respondent.
[72] I
now turn to deal with the question whether the applicant has proved
his claim for citizenship as a South
African. It bears mentioning as
a point of departure that Tat’ u Ndwandwe appears to be an
illiterate person. This is borne
out in affixing his thumb print on
his affidavit as a substitute for his written signature. This begs
the question which has been
raised correctly in my view by the
respondents, whether he indeed read the affidavit of the applicant to
which he deposed a confirmatory
affidavit.
[73]
Whilst it may be insignificant there are other concerns which I am
unable to ignore that appear in the handwritten
affidavit of Tat’
u Ndwandwe and annexed as “AA19”. In paragraph 3 of his
affidavit; he states that “
four years ago a young man came
to my house and told me his mother had died and were looking for me
in order to register him at
home affairs. He further told me that his
mother’s surname is Gumbi. I then assisted him to register for
an ID (sic).
”
[74] In
paragraph 6 he states “
As far as I know Sandile’s
mother was a South African. The only proof I have that Sandile is my
son is that he came looking
for me and confirmed that he’s
mother’s surname is Gumbi
.” (sic)
[75]
More importantly is what is sated in paragraph 2 of the same
affidavit where he states “
I know Sandile Gift Ndwandwe. He
is my son long time ago when I was working at a farm in Pongola I met
a woman
and we had a child together
. She was
pregnant when I last saw her
….
”
(My own emphasis) It is quite interesting how tat’ u Ndwandwe
can state factually that they had a child with the mother
of the
applicant whereas the last time he saw her, she was pregnant. How
would he know that a child born by Ms Gumbi is his child
if that was
never brought to his attention by the mother of the child. How does
he exclude the many possibilities, such as a case
where the pregnancy
of Ms Gambi was not successful or that she was pregnant a child
fathered by someone else. How would Tat’
u Ndwandwe know a
person by the name of Sandile Gift Ndwandwe as his son without any
further proof, such as a DNA laboratory test
or any other independent
evidentiary material that confirms his paternity.
[76]
What can be gleaned from the handwritten affidavit “AA19”
of tat’ u Ndwandwe is that the
sole purpose for which the
applicant came to look for him was to get his assistance to have him
registered for purposes of obtaining
an ID document. That view is
further supported by Tat’ u Ndwandwe’s averments that his
traditional chief does not know
the applicant. Further, he knows
Sandile to be working in Johannesburg but he does not know what he
was doing.
[77]
All this flies in the face of the applicant’s averments in
paragraph 7 of his affidavit in which he
stated that, the purpose for
searching for his father was to be united with his family. It is
quite surprising why someone who
goes on a journey to search for his
father so desperately, after getting the help he needed from him
disappears to the extent that
his very father does not know what he
is doing in Johannesburg. The impression that was given by the
applicant that he needed to
be reunited and to form a relationship
with his father is not demonstrable in his conduct.
[78]
Similarly, I can find no credence to the issue at hand from the
confirmatory affidavits of the half sisters
and brothers of the
applicant. The essence of their affidavits is to the effect that they
know the applicant as belonging to the
Ndwandwe family and they grew
up with him. None of them can state how they know him to be a
Ndwandwe. Obviously, in the absence
of proof which is lacking for
Tat’ u Ndwandwe to claim with certainty or prove that the
applicant is his son, it follows
that their confirmatory affidavits
are hollow and are not helpful.
[79] It
is worth noting that the applicant does not state anywhere for how
long he stayed with his mother and
at what age did he leave her or
his maternal home to search for his father. The importance of this
question is why did the applicant
not make a similar demand from her
mother, to register him for the purposes of an ID. To add, I find it
curious that there is no
mention of any family member of applicant’s
mother in the applicant’s allegations. Instead as pointed out
by the respondents,
the applicant stated in his founding affidavit of
the second application, that he does not know his mother, an
allegation that
is at complete variance with his averment in the
founding affidavit in respect of this application.
[80]
Similarly, the applicant has chosen not to deal with the allegations
made in the respondent’s answering
affidavit that an
investigation into the claims that the applicant was registered at
Zitike Primary School revealed that the register
of the school was
tampered with. Most notably is the information according to the
register of a person with the name “Sandile
Ndwandwe” who
was born 31 January 1991 and admitted as a pupil on 19 January 1995.
This information could not have been correct
according to the
respondents since it would have meant the learner was three years old
at the time.
[81]
This matter became even more complicated when compared with the
‘original’ register (annexure
“AA15”) which
revealed that one Sandile Ndwandwe with the date of both indicated as
9 January 1992 was admitted at
the said school during 1999 when he
was 7 years old. As if this confusion was not enough the Vice
Principal of the school caused
another correspondence to be written
wherein he mentioned that one Sandile Ndwandwe with the date of birth
indicated as 1992 had
attended their school in 1995.
[82] As
alluded to above the applicant chose not to dispute or reject the
discrepancies that are borne out in
the registers of the school which
according to the respondent confirm a suspicion that the registers
have been altered in order
to fraudulently suit the allegation that
the applicant was a learner at the said school.
[83]
The absence of the applicant’s documents namely, Form B1-24
which is a requirement for the late registration
of birth and
relevant hard copies of documents which are required as proof of the
process that was followed is a cause for concern
that could not have
been ignored by the immigration officer. That taken together with all
other facts I have pointed to above,
the conclusion reached by the
immigration officer that the applicant is an ‘illegal
foreigner’ is unquestionable. A
basis for the conclusion
reached in my view by the immigration officer is adequately
established and was justified.
[84]
Consequently, based on the evidence before me, I am unable to find
any justification to set aside the conclusions
reached by the
immigration officer. I cannot find any merit in the allegations that
the immigration officers were baised towards
the applicant in the
investigation of the matter. Neither do I find any wrong doing in the
procedure employed in the investigations
and the enquiries that were
conducted with the applicant. Contrary to what is stated by the
applicant I find that the respondents
had conducted themselves in a
fair and transparent manner in dealing with the matter. The
allegation that they failed to take into
account the totality of the
evidence is baseless with no merit.
[85]
Section 6
of PAJA reads as follows:
“
6. Judicial Review
of Administrative action – (1) any person may institute
proceedings in a court or a tribunal for the judicial
review of an
administrative action, (2) A court or tribunal has the power to
judicially review an administrative action if –
(a)
the administrator who took it (i) – (iii)…;
(b)
a mandatory and material procedure or condition prescribed by an
empowering provision
was not complied with;
(c)
the action was procedurally unfair;
(d)
the action was materially influenced by an error of law;
(e)
the action was taken
(i)
to
(ii)
……;
(iii)
because irrelevant considerations were taken into account
or relevant
considerations were not considered;
(iv)
to
(v)
…..;
(vi)
arbitrarily or capriciously;
(f)
the action itself (i)…(ii) (aa) –(dd)…;
(g)
the exercise of the power or the performance of the function
authorised by the empowering
provisions; in pursuance of which the
administrative action was purportedly taken, is so unreasonable that
no reasonable person
could have so exercised the power or performed
the function.
[86]
Regard being had to the provisions of
section 6
above I am of the
view that the declaration of the applicant to be an illegal foreigner
is an administrative action as defined
in section (1) of PAJA.
Therefore, an application to review such a decision by an organ of
state as is the case in this matter
is competent under PAJA.
[87] I
am however as alluded above unable to find any conduct that supports
the grounds as set out in
section 6
(2) (e) (i) of PAJA as contended
by the applicant. The respondents in my view acted in an ethical
manner and at no stage displayed
dishonor to the applicant nor
attempted to act outside the perimeters of the immigration laws.
Neither do I find the conduct of
the respondents to have rendered the
applicant stateless as contended. I also do not find any reason to
deal with the old laws
some of which have since been repealed which
are of no consequence to this application.
[88] It
may warrant commenting albeit in a brief manner, on the issue of the
curator ad litem
report which the applicant relies on as a
further piece of evidence that confirms his citizenship or
alternatively, evidence that
was ignored or not taken into account
when he was found to be an illegal foreigner.
[89]
There has been no evidence that suggests that the applicant was not
entitled to follow the necessary processes
and satisfy the necessary
requirements in order to qualify as a citizen of the republic. That
he has not chosen to do. In the absence
thereof nothing precluded the
officials of the respondent to investigate his status in the county
and upon the established evidence
as it is in this matter, declare
him to be an illegal foreigner, who according to the dictates of the
Act ought to be deported
in terms of the Act
[4]
.
[90]
I also cannot find fault in the Minister’s exercise of the
powers conferred upon her in terms of the
Act
[5]
,
to reject any representations made to her if she is of the view that
the case of an applicant is based on fraudulent representations
as it
appears to be the case in this matter.
[91] As
alluded above, none of the grounds for review as envisaged in section
6 of PAJA have been established
by the applicant. On the contrary,
the applicant has failed to produce evidence which contradicts the
facts upon which the respondents
are relying on to declare him a
citizen of Zimbabwe. The probabilities from the facts presented by
both sides lead to a conclusion
that the applicant is an illegal
immigrant in the Republic of South Africa who has ties or homage
traceable in Zimbabwe.
[92] I
am therefore unable to disagree with the findings of the third
respondent which have been upheld by both
the first and second
respondents. Consequently, I find no reason to remit the matter to
the second respondent for reconsideration.
Accordingly, the
application ought to be dismissed.
[93] I
now turn to deal with the issue of costs. The respondents called for
attorney and client costs ostensibly
on the grounds that the failure
of the applicant to disclose his previous applications which bear
similar features as the present
one amounts to forum shopping and was
misleading to the court.
[94] It
bears mentioning that the conduct of the applicant in dealing with
the matter from the period of its investigation
is not portraying him
as a candid person. This much can be gleaned in the failed attempts
by the third respondent to have his corporation
and even through his
legal representative. His attempt to explain to this court why he
failed to disclose his previous litigations
which emanate from the
same set of facts is concerning and I find it disingenuous. However,
I take into account that notwithstanding
the concerns above. Since
the applicant was in a bid to establish his citizenship in the
country, given all the other factors that
surround this matter such
as his family ties within the republic and the lapses in the system
of the respondents to prevent instances
such as where an illegal
foreigner can access formal documentation such as ID’s and
Passports without fulfilling the necessary
requirements, all that
persuaded me to order costs on a party and party scale.
[95] I
was also invited to make an order barring the applicant from bringing
any further proceedings against the
state in any court of law until
such time that whatever cost orders have been awarded against him
have been paid. The applicant
had nothing to say on this request. I
am therefore inclined to grant the additional order that is sought
albeit, with a degree
of relaxation as opposed to a blanket bar as
proposed by the respondent.
Order
[96] In
the result the following order will issue:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs on
a party and party scale.
2.
The applicant is barred from instituting
any further proceedings in any court arising out of this matter, save
for any appeals or
reviews of the orders made against him in respect
of this matter until the orders of costs made against him are paid in
full.
V
M Nqumse
Acting
Judge of the High Court
For
the Appellants
: Adv. S B Mgomezulu
Instructed
by
:
C R Masilela
Attorneys
For the
Respondent
: G Bofilatos
Instructed
by
: The Office of the State Attorney
Heard
on
: 15 February 2022
Judgement handed down
on
: 19 July 2022
[1]
Boyat
and Others v Hansa and Another
1955 93) SA 547
(N) at 553C-E
[2]
Vaatz
v Law Society of Namibia
1991 (3) SA 563
at 566 S – 567 B
[3]
Plasan
Evans Pants Ltd v Van Riebeeck Pants (Pty) Ltd
1984 (3) SA 623A
at
634E – 635C
[4]
See
Section 32
of the
Immigration Act, Act
13 of 2002
[5]
See
Section 8
(1);
8
(4) read with
Section 48
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