Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 561South Africa
Akinsanya v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (148643/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 561 (4 December 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
4 December 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Immigration Act 13 of 2002 – section 29(1) – declaration of foreigner as prohibited person – reviewing and setting aside the Minister’s decision to declare a person a prohibited person – factors to consider – fraud and non-disclosure by Applicant- whether good cause exists- whether the Minister acted unfairly- intention of the Applicant when he entered South Africa on a visitor’s visa
Judgment
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## Akinsanya v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (148643/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 561 (4 December 2025)
Akinsanya v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (148643/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 561 (4 December 2025)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
JUDGMENT
Case
No: 148643/2024
In
the matter between:
PETER
SUNDAY AKINSANYA
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
DIRECTOR
GENERAL DEPARTMENT
OF
HOME
AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
Neutral citation:
Peter Sunday Akinsayna vs Minister of Home Affairs and one
other
(Case no 148643/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC (04-11-2025)
Coram:
PATHER AJ
Heard
:
22 October 2025
Delivered
:
4 December 2025
Delivered:
This Judgement was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by email and by uploading
to
Caselines and released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand down is
deemed to be 04 December 2025 .
Summary:
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
–
section 29(1)
–
declaration of foreigner as prohibited person – reviewing and
setting aside the Minister’s decision to declare
a person a
prohibited person – factors to consider – fraud and
non-disclosure by Applicant- whether good cause exists-
whether the
Minister acted unfairly- intention of the Applicant when he entered
South Africa on a visitor’s visa
Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
– review –
failure to consider relevant factors – consideration of
irrelevant factors – sufficient evidence
required to show
consideration of all relevant factors
ORDER
1.
The Application is dismissed.
2.
The decision by the First Respondent not to review the applicant’s
status
as a prohibited person is declared to be valid.
3.
The Applicant is ordered to pay the costs of this review, including
those of
counsel, on scale A.
JUDGEMENT
PATHER,
AJ
Introduction
[1]
The applicant seeks an Order to review and set aside the decision of
the
First Respondent (“the Minister”) dated 4 September
2024 rejecting his Appeal in terms of
Section 8(6)
of the
Immigration
Act 13 of 2002
, as amended (“the Act”) to be declared a
non-prohibited person the Applicant to be a prohibited person.
[2]
In the alternative, Applicant seeks that the First Respondent be
directed
to retake a decision on the Applicant’s application
and to deliver such decision within thirty (30) days from service of
this Order.
[3]
The Application was brought in terms of Section 6(1) of the Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”), read
with Rule 53 of the Uniform Rules. Further, the Applicant relies
on
Section 33 of the Constitution.
The
Applicant’s founding affidavit is somewhat absent about the
actual facts surrounding his entry into South Africa, and
light is
shed on this from the Respondents’ answering affidavit.
[4]
The Applicant first entered South Africa on 12 November 2014.
He
came to South Africa on a single-entry visitor’s visa which
visa is used when one enters the country for holiday or a vacation.
He did so as he was a Nigerian citizen, and an international
traveller. A visitor’s visa is usually for persons who wish
to
enter the country on a temporary basis for tourism. Having a
visitor’s visa does not mean that you may remain in the country
indefinitely. It merely means that the application for a visa
was reviewed by the South African embassy, and that the office
of the
Consulate General has determined that one is eligible to enter the
country for the reason stated in the visa application.
The visa
application is a document where the visitor has an obligation to set
out his/her details truthfully and in detail.
[5]
The visa will stipulate one’s entry date into the
country
and the exit date out of the country. In respect
of the Applicant, his visa would have expired on 22 November 2014.
The Applicant, however, did not exit the country when his visa
expired, as he was supposed to have.
[6]
What the Applicant says, however, is that instead of exiting South
Africa,
he applied for a work visa from within the Republic.
One cannot convert a visitor’s visa to a work visa, and if
another
visa is required, it is clear that this must be applied for
from the country of origin and not from within South Africa. In
the present case, and if the Applicant decided that there was a
prospective employment opportunity in South Africa, then he would
have had to have exited the country and made an application from
Nigeria for a work visa to be issued. This the Applicant did not
do.
The
Applicant says that:
2.1 he
is a Nigerian citizen.
2.2. he
entered South Africa on a 10-day Visitor’s Visa on 12 November
2024;
2.3 applied
for a work visa whilst on a Visitor’s visa;
2.4
used the services of a Visa Agent only known as “Sam”
whom Applicant says he paid
R23 000 for his application for a
work visa;
[7]
It is difficult to track what the Applicant had in mind when he
entered
South Africa on the visitor’s visa. Applicant states
that he obtained a work visa from within the Republic of SA for the
purpose of taking up employment at a company called Mortu Mortu (Pty)
Ltd.
[8]
By this stage, I had already been made aware that the
Applicant’s
visitor’s visa had expired and he was in the
country illegally. He then applied for a work visa, also
illegally. The
Respondents uncovered that prior to the Applicant’s
visitor’s visa being issued in 2014, there existed a work visa
issued in the name of the Applicant on 19 December 2013, for
employment by the same company as the one that was applied for in
2015, and which visa was “valid” up to 2018. There
is no plausible explanation for how the 2013 work visa pre-dates
the
visitors’ visa. Whilst the Applicant attempts to distance
himself from the first work visa (2013), the Respondents
demonstrate
that the said visa was attached to the Applicant’s permanent
residence application.
[9]
According to the Applicant, he has no knowledge as to how the 2013
work
visa found its way as an annexure to his permanent residence
application, but he could only assume that this was due to the fact
that the Agent who processed the application attached this, without
his consent or his knowledge. If this were to be accepted
as an
explanation, there is no further explanation as to how the said agent
would have acquired the visa, how the Applicant signed
the
application without noticing the annexure and why this was not
explained by him at all. The permanent residence application
was made on 18 February 2019.
[10]
The Applicant’s counsel in his heads of argument refers to the
2013 work visa and
alludes to the suspicion of irregularity that the
respondents approached the applicant with. What, however, is
not dealt
with is why this was not disclosed at all by the applicant
in his application to this court. Also, the Applicant’s
permanent residence application was made 15 months prior to the
expiry of the Applicant’s 2015 work visa. The explanation
tendered by the Applicant’s attorney and counsel is that they
are aware that the Respondents take a long time to deal with
these
applications, so they were of the view that if Applicant’s
attorney lodged the application earlier than
the regulations
prescribed, by the time the application was attended to, the 2015
work visa would have come to an end. They
suggested that they
were being proactive to act in advance. This reasoning is concerning.
[11]
The above events can only be described as a calamity of illegal
conduct by the Applicant,
almost making an error at every turn in
trying to stay in the country. The papers and in particular the
Respondents’
answering affidavit shines a light on the attempts
made by the Applicant to remain in the country, and this has all been
abortive.
[12]
This application deals with Respondents’ rejection of the
Applicant’s permanent
residency application. The
permanent residency application was rejected for various reasons
which were inter alia summarized
as follows:
-
The Applicant had a negative police clearance.
-
The work visa that was submitted was fraudulent.
-
By virtue of the Respondents finding that the work visa was
fraudulently obtained, this brought
about the Applicant being
rendered a prohibited person and he was flagged as such in terms of
Section 29(1)(f) of the Act.
[13]
Not deterred by the state of events and the fact that the Applicant
is on the Respondents’
radar, the Applicant is not dissuaded by
the rejection of his permanent residence application, and he then
applies for a study
visa a few months after his permanent residence
application was refused. This application was rejected for Applicant
having submitted
a fraudulent work visa purported to have been issued
by the Department of Home Affairs.
[14]
The Applicant then brought an application in 2021 in terms of
Section
29
(2) of the
Immigration Act for
a declaration that the Applicant be
declared to be a “non-prohibited person”. The
Applicant supplied a South
African issued criminal expungement
certificate, which would have been issued by the South African Police
Services Criminal Records
Centre. Despite the fact that the
expungement certificate allegedly issued by SAPS was found to be
fraudulent, the application
was rejected for the fact that
additionally, the Applicant had overstayed his visitor’s visa,
and he had attempted to change
his status from a visitor status to
work status, which is not permitted. The Department also raised
the fact that the Applicant
was found to have possessed two work
visas that were purportedly fraudulently issued. The
Respondents contend that
this decision was not appealed by the
Applicant. For the upliftment of the prohibition
[15]
The Applicant then instituted another application in terms of Section
29 (2) of the Act
on 8 February 2024. This application was
rejected on 4 September 2024 for the following reasons:
-
The fraudulent work visa and non-cooperation with the investigation;
-
Lack of credibility;
-
Lack of South African expungement of criminal record;
[16]
The Applicant then instituted an application for the reconsideration
of the above decision
on 29 October 2024, challenging the reasons
that were furnished in the rejection letter.
-
There was no formal communication regarding the investigation.
-
The lack of credibility of the Applicant’s version;
-
No authentic criminal expungement certificate existed
[17]
What I am certain of in regard to the papers filed is that there
existed 2 fraudulent work
visas. The Applicant will contend
that he is unaware and that this was the work of an agent. I do
not accept that explanation.
The Applicant met the agent, he
was told that the Agent can assist. He knew that the agent was
not an employee of Home Affairs,
or else he would not have met him at
the Gauteng Train Station. He paid him R23 000 in cash for
the work that was to
be done. This is suspicious and clearly
was a “contact” being used to short-circuit the process
and bypass the
systems, rules and regulations that were in place. The
fact that the two work visas are for employment at the same company
is nothing
short of a red flag. Sam, the agent, is clearly involved
in underhanded activities with the Department of Home Affairs.
The
Applicant knew that Sam “would make a plan” and
therefore engaged with him. The futile attempt by the Applicant
to distance himself from Sam and blame Sam for filling in his forms
is unacceptable.
[18]
The Applicant had no intention to come to SA to visit in 2014, when
he arrived with his
visitor’s visa. His intention was to
remain in the country and use whatever means he could to obtain
status in South
Africa and he did not have any difficulties in
achieving this by illegal means.
[19]
Everything that the Applicant did to regularise his stay in South
Africa was through underhanded
means. The Applicant was not a
victim of a scam, but rather he cooperated with the scam so as to
achieve his own agenda.
This is borne out in the steps
that he took.
[20]
The Applicant started off with his visitor’s visa, then he
attempted to seek asylum.
He is told the process is long and he
should rather apply for a work visa. At that point, he knew
that he wanted to short-circuit
the legal systems that were in place.
He then applies for a work visa, then he finds out there was an
existing work visa application
in 2013, then he applies for a student
visa. The application for a student visa is riddled with
further queries. The applicant,
according to his permanent residency
application is a Software Engineer, yet in his student visa
application, he wants to enrol
to study to be an IT Software
Developer. He does not apply to a recognised accredited
institution but to a college.
This is suggestive that he wanted
to tick any box applicable to remain in SA. This meant that
declarations that he had to
sign when filling in forms were not
truthful.
[21]
The version of events as set out by the Applicant is problematic on
various grounds, and
I cannot ignore this. The Applicant’s
founding affidavit omits salient information regarding his
applications, yet
these are not disclosed. The Respondents’
answering affidavits deal with these issues and the Applicant then
tries
to answer these allegations in reply. This court views
the b Applicant’s conduct as disingenuous in not being
upfront with all of these facts, and the irresistible conclusion that
the court can draw is that the Applicant was being cautious
as he was
unsure what the Respondents were aware of in so far as the facts were
concerned. This is a dangerous tactic.
[22]
I am in agreement with the Respondents that the reasons set out in
the rejection letters
are adequate. In Koyabe v Minister for Home
Affairs the court stated as follows:
“
Although the
reasons must be sufficient, they need not be specified in
minute
detail, nor is it necessary to show how every relevant fact weighed
in the ultimate finding. What constitutes adequate reasons
will therefore
vary, depending on the circumstances of the
case. Ordinarily, reasons
will be adequate if a
complainant can make out a reasonable substantial
case for a
ministerial review or an appeal.”
[23]
The reasons that the Applicant sets out for rejecting the
Respondents’ 2024 application
are that the Applicant was
unaware that a 2013 visa application was submitted in his name, that
the 2015 visa was validly and legally
issued, and that the Applicant
had never been deported.
[24]
On the issue of the 2013 Visa I do not accept that he was unaware of
this, as his details
were used and this could not have been a mere
coincidence. The Respondents say that the Applicant, under oath
stated that he applied
for permanent residence after expiry of his
visa, and according to the version that the Applicant puts before
this court, the only
visa that expired would have been the 2013
visa. Respondents’ criticism of the Applicant goes
further in that they
say that he would not have had a work visa for
the required minimum period of 5 years, thus qualifying him to apply
for permanent
residency in February 2019. They say that it is
illogical that he prematurely applied for permanent residency in
these circumstances.
[25]
Whilst the Applicant’s counsel contends that the Respondents do
not allege that the
2015 visa was fraudulently obtained. The
Respondents disagreed with this and submitted that the visitor’s
visa cannot
be converted to a work visa. They also submitted that at
the time the Applicant is alleged to have applied for the 2015 work
visa,
he was already in the country on a visitor’s visa that
was valid for 10 days, and this means that when he applied for the
work visa he would have been in the country illegally. He also
applied for a work visa from within the country. Also,
the
rejection letter of the 2015 visa, which the Applicant puts up in his
papers clearly states that the Respondents were aware
that the
Applicant was in possession of two fraudulent work visas
[26]
The various inconsistencies regarding his employment and Applicant’s
version that
he was told where he would work and the position, he
would occupy do not sound logical or convincing. One would
expect that
he would have been able to put up a bona fide offer of
employment that he received. This was not put up in any of the
papers
that were before me.
[27]
The Respondents submitted that the Applicant would have known that he
was paying a bribe
when he paid the cash to Sam at the Gautrain
Station. It is common sense that the Applicant ought to have known
that he should
not have been in South Africa after his visitors visa
had expired, and he should have returned to Nigeria and regularised
his status
in South Africa through formal, legal processes.
[28]
Much was made of the fact that the Respondents made reference to the
Applicant being deported
when, in fact, this did not occur.
Nothing turns on this. The fact is that the Applicant ought to
have been deported
the moment his visa expired unless compelling
reasons required him to remain in South Africa despite the expiration
of his visitor’s
visa. The dispute raised by the Applicant is a
last-ditch attempt to render the Respondents’ decision
reviewable and this
court does not accept this excuse. The
overwhelming facts surrounding the expiration of the visitor’s
visa, the fraudulent
work visas, the student visa application and the
permanent residency application supersede the insertion of the
deportation note
in the letter of rejection. This cannot be a reason
to review the decisions of the Respondents.
[29]
The Court is aware of its power to judicially review an
administrative action, and this
is done where the court is aware that
relevant considerations were not considered, and in the converse,
irrelevant considerations
were considered by the decision maker.
In this matter, this is not the case. The Respondents
considered material facts
such as the factors that deal with the
Applicant being in possession of at least two fraudulent visas,
pursuant to irregular applications
privately through a “visa
agent”. The Second Respondent is the only authority to issue a
visa, and the Second Respondent
categorically states that the visas
that the Applicant was in possession of, were not issued by Second
Respondent.
[30]
This court finds that it was immaterial that the Applicant owned/owns
property in the country,
had a valid driver’s license as
compelling reasons for the First Respondent to consider the
application for permanent residency
favourable. In fact, this
court has serious concerns regarding the purchase of immovable
property by the Applicant and the
documents used to give effect to
the transfer. No proper information was put up of the transfer,
but rather a letter from
the conveyancer. There are strict compliance
requirements to transfer immovable property and none of these
documents were put up.
I am concerned that the acquisition of
the property could have been done so fraudulently or irregularly.
[31]
The Respondents state in their heads of argument that the Applicant
was not declared undesirable
in terms of Section 30(1) of the Act.
They state that to do so would be considered irrational. What they
say they did was
declared the Applicant to be prohibited in terms of
Section 29(1)(f) of the Act which states:
“
The
following foreigners are prohibited persons and do not qualify for a
port of entry visa, admission into the Republic, a visa
or
a
permanent residence permit:
(f)
anyone found in possession of a fraudulent visa, passport, permanent
residence permit or identification document”
[32]
The Respondents stated that in 2024, the Applicant applied in terms
of Section 29(2) of
the Act, in which he endeavoured to show good
cause why the Second Respondent should declare him a
non-
prohibited
person. The Respondents state that on both occasions that the
applications were brought, they were considered and then
rejected.
The Respondents believe that the Applicant felt entitled to
additional engagement before the decision was made. The Court
does
not believe that any further engagement was necessary.
[33]
The Court accepts that the Respondents considered all the factors
governing the applications
and the rejection was validly made. The
Applicant’s counsel argued that the case that I should consider
is
Bihombel & Makali v Minister of Home Affairs And another
(9940/2022)
[2024] ZAWCHC 72
(6 March 2024)
and stated that the
present case is indistinguishable from the said authority.
[34]
I disagree with the Applicant’s reliance on the Bihombel
authority, as when the applicants
in the case referred to applied for
a work visa they were already legally in the country. We know
that the Applicant’s
visitor’s visa had expired. The
Applicants made enquiries in regard to the discovery that their visas
were fraudulent.
In the present matter, the Applicant does
nothing and, in fact, uses the fraudulent visa to advance his
permanent residence application.
The Applicant in the authority
facilitated the arrest of the visa agent. In the present matter
the Applicant stated he knew
nothing about Sam and could offer no
details whatsoever. What is also telling is that when the
Applicant in the present matter
is told that his visa is fraudulent
in 2019, he does not report the matter to the authorities, nor does
he deal with the agent
or find out where the agent was. He
instead applies for another category of visa, i.e. Student visa.
[35]
Section 33(1) of the Constitution gives everyone the right to
“administrative action
that is lawful, reasonable and
procedurally fair”. Section 33(3) states in part that
“[n]ational legislation must be
enacted to give effect to these
rights”. The relevant national legislation is the PAJA. In
Minister of Defence and Military Veterans v Motau and Others
2014
(5) SA 69
(CC) Para 33, the Constitutional Court explained the
factors to consider when determining whether conduct amounts to
administrative
or executive action. It stated:
“
The
concept of “administrative action”, as defined in section
1(i) of PAJA, is the threshold for engaging in administrative-law
review. The rather unwieldy definition can be distilled into seven
elements: there must be (a) a decision of an administrative
nature;
(b) by an organ of state or a natural or juristic person;
(c) exercising a public power or performing a public function;
(d) in terms of any legislation or an empowering provision; (e) that
adversely affects rights; (f) that has a direct, external
legal
effect; and (g) that does not fall under any of the listed
exclusions.”
[36]
In the present matter, the actions of the Respondents, whilst
administrative in nature,
were correct and the execution of their
administrative functions was valid.
[37]
This is not the first time that decisions by the respondents to
declare a person prohibited
in terms of section 29 of the Act is
before our Courts and in circumstances that warrant a review, this
falls within the definition
of administrative action and is
reviewable under the PAJA. In
Klemenc v Head of Immigration
Inspectorate and Others 2024 JDR 1729 (GP) page 12
, this Court
said:
a) “The
most important question before me is whether the prohibition can be
regarded as administrative action.
b)
There must be a decision to declare a person prohibited.
c) That
decision is taken by an organ of state, exercising a public power
performing a public function in terms
of any legislation…
d) In
this instance the decision is taken in terms of
Section 29(1)(f)
and
29
(2) of the
Immigration Act
.
e) The
Respondents were exercising a public power in terms of legislation.”
[38]
Having considered these authorities, there is no other conclusion
that I can reach but
that the Respondents’ actions are
administratively correct and that the Applicant has failed to show
good cause as was required
from him in his application. The
Application cannot succeed.
[39]
The Respondents were successful and there is no reason that costs
should not follow the
result.
[40]
In the result the following order is made:
Order
1.
The review application is dismissed.
2.
The Applicant is ordered to pay the costs of this review, including
those of
counsel, on scale A.
PATHER
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For
Applicant: S G
Barclay-Beuthin
Instructed
by: Stefanie De
Saude-Darbandi
For
Respondent: Diana Murote
Instructed
by: Andre Strauss –
State Attorney
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