Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 6South Africa
Kapata v Chairperson: Standing Committee for Refugee Affairs and Others (D3492/2019) [2023] ZAKZDHC 6; 2025 (2) SA 205 (KZD) (15 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
15 February 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Kapata v Chairperson: Standing Committee for Refugee Affairs and Others (D3492/2019) [2023] ZAKZDHC 6; 2025 (2) SA 205 (KZD) (15 February 2023)
Kapata v Chairperson: Standing Committee for Refugee Affairs and Others (D3492/2019) [2023] ZAKZDHC 6; 2025 (2) SA 205 (KZD) (15 February 2023)
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sino date 15 February 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE NO: D3492/2019
In the matter between:
LANDU EUNICE
KAPATA
APPLICANT
and
CHAIRPERSON: STANDING
COMMITTEE FOR
REFUGEE
AFFAIRS
FIRST RESPONDENT
REFUGEE STATUS
DETERMINATION OFFICER
SECOND RESPONDENT
CENTRE MANAGER: DURBAN
REFUGEE
RECEPTION
OFFICE
THIRD RESPONDENT
CHIEF DIRECTOR: ASYLUM
SEEKERS MANAGEMENT
FOURTH RESPONDENT
THE MINISTER OF HOME
AFFAIRS FOR THE
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
FIFTH RESPONDENT
THE DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF
HOME
AFFAIRS
SIXTH RESPONDENT
THE MINISTER OF POLICE
FOR THE
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
J
U D G M E N T
SHAPIRO
AJ
[1]
The applicant is an orphan from the Democratic Republic of Congo
(“DRC”),
who was born on 26 May 1999. Her parents were
killed when she was very young, and she resided for several years in
the DRC with
a married couple who were friends of her late parents.
When she was apparently compelled to leave their home, the applicant
travelled
to South Africa and was reunited with her sister, Kapata
Sergine Kavunga.
[2]
Ms. Kavunga is likewise a refugee from the DRC, who appears to be
resident in the
Republic in terms of a temporary asylum permit
originally issued to her in 2008. The applicant arrived in the
Republic when she
was sixteen years old and has been living here
since then. Attempts by the applicant, together with the assistance
of Ms. Kavunga
and a social worker to finalize the foster care
process were abortive and no concrete steps had been taken by the
time the applicant
attained majority.
[3]
Once she was a major, the applicant applied for asylum in terms of
the Refugees Act
130 of 1998 (“the Act”). The applicant
alleged that she was a dependent of Ms. Kavunga, who together with
Ms. Kavunga's
husband, was her sole source of support and her only
relative. The applicant alleged that she qualified for asylum because
her
late parents were the victims of political violence and she
herself had fled the threat of violence when she was accused unjustly
of having an affair with the husband of the couple to which I have
already referred.
[4]
The applicant's application was refused on 26 March 2018 on the basis
that she had
come to South Africa because there were better prospects
in the Republic and not because she was a genuine "refugee"
as defined in the Act.
[5]
The applicant was detained on 26 March 2019 ahead of a contemplated
deportation and
kept in custody, appearing before a Magistrate in
terms of section 34 of the Immigration Act on 28 March and again on
18 April
2019. On 18 April 2019, the applicant's detention for the
purposes of her deportation to the DRC was extended for a further 90
days.
[6]
This detention was the genesis of the application that served before
me.
[7]
On 29 April 2019, the applicant's attorneys launched an urgent
application for orders
directing that the applicant be released from
detention and that such release order operate in effect as an interim
interdict with
immediate effect against her further arrest pending
the outcome of Part B of the application, which was a review of the
first respondent's
decision to reject the applicant's application for
asylum.
[8]
This Court granted the interim order on 3 May 2019 and the applicant
has remained
in the Republic in terms of that order since then.
[9]
The applicant's grounds of review of the first respondent's decision
are premised
on an alleged error of law that was made in not granting
her refugee status as well as relevant facts that were allegedly
ignored
when the decision was made.
[10]
The applicant argued that she was destitute and was a "dependent"
of her sister, Ms.
Kavunga and therefore qualified for the granting
of asylum.
[11]
This attack on the first respondent's decision is premised on the
provisions of section 3 of
the Act which says the following:
‘
Subject
to Chapter 3, a person qualifies for refugee status for the purposes
of this Act if that person -
(a)
owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted by reason of his or
her race, gender, tribe, religion,
nationality, political opinion, or
membership of a particular social group, is outside the country of
his or her nationality and
is unable or unwilling to avail himself or
herself of the protection of that country, or, not having a
nationality and being outside
the country of his or her former
habitual residence is unable, is unable or, owing to such fear, and
willing to return to it; or
(b)
owing to external aggression, occupation, foreign domination or other
events seriously disturbing public
order in either a part or the
whole of his or her country of origin or nationality, is compelled to
leave his or her place of habitual
residence in order to seek refuge
in another place outside his or her country of origin or nationality;
or
(c)
is a spouse or dependent of a person contemplated in paragraph (a) or
(b).’
[12]
In turn, a dependent is defined in section 1 of the Act to mean "in
relation to an asylum
seeker or refugee… the spouse, any
unmarried dependent child, or any destitute, aged or infirm member of
the family of such
asylum seeker or refugee".
[13]
Essentially, the applicant argued that her status as a dependent of
Ms. Kavunga (being a destitute
member of Ms. Kavunga's family)
entitled her to be granted asylum in terms of the Act.
[14]
The applicant criticized the first respondent for failing to take
relevant factors into account,
including that administrative problems
delayed the foster application to which I have referred, and that if
this issue had been
determined timeously, she would have qualified as
Ms. Kavunga's dependent simply based on her age.
[15]
The respondents opposed to the application, although they took no
further steps in the review
after delivery of the answering papers.
[16]
The respondents argued that the applicant did not qualify for refugee
status as defined in the
Act and they denied that she was destitute.
The respondents formed the view that the applicant's "desire"
to be reunited
with her sister was an after-the-fact construction to
support an application for asylum in circumstances where there were
no legitimate
grounds for the application at all.
[17]
It is unfortunate that the respondents did not deliver Heads of
Argument or appear when the application
served before me as an
opposed application on 18 January 2023. Their assistance in this
difficult matter would have been helpful.
[18]
Apart from being provided with Ms. Kavunga's Asylum Seeker Temporary
Permit, which was renewed
on 11 March 2019, I was not given any
further information about the status of Ms. Kavunga's application or
its contents (including
whether or not Ms. Kavunga referred to the
applicant either in general terms, or specifically, as her
dependent).
[19]
I raised these concerns with the applicant’s counsel, Mr.
Mthethwa and enquired whether
these gaps in the information could be
remedied.
[20]
Given the consequences to the applicant if her application was
unsuccessful, I postponed the
application to 9 February 2023, so that
Mr. Mthethwa and his attorneys could provide seek documents and/or
make further submissions
to me (including in respect of Ms. Kavunga's
application for asylum) before I determined the application.
[21]
When Mr. Mthethwa appeared before me on 9 February 2023, he was
unable to take the matter any
further. I am however grateful to him
for his efforts, and his assistance.
[22]
The gravamen of the applicant's application is that being a dependent
of a refugee as contemplated
in section 3(c) of the Act is a
self-standing category under which asylum can be granted to an
applicant.
[23]
For the reasons that follow, I do not agree with this proposition.
[24]
Applications for asylum are made in terms of Chapter 3 of the Act.
[25]
Section 21(2A) requires every applicant, when making an application,
to declare "all his
or her spouses and dependents, whether in
the Republic or elsewhere, in the application for asylum".
[26]
Similarly, section 21B obliges a person who applies for refugee
status and "who would like
one or more of his dependents to be
granted refugee status" to include the details of such
dependents in the application when
applying for asylum.
[27]
These provisions are consistent with the definition of a "dependent"
in section 1 which,
whilst referring
inter alia
to any
destitute member of the family of such asylum seeker, defines a
dependent "
in relation to
an asylum seeker or refugee"
[my emphasis].
[28]
Therefore, it seems to me that the Legislature intended that an
asylum seeker could not only
apply or qualify for refugee status
themselves if there was a well-founded fear of persecution or if
their country of origin was
an unsafe place to live because of
external aggression and the like but could also apply for asylum for
and on behalf of their
dependents.
[29]
This interpretation is also consistent with the procedural
requirements on an asylum seeker which
are set out in section 21, and
which I have described above.
[30]
The legislative scheme therefore recognises that one genuine refugee
is sufficient to gain asylum
for their immediate family as well. This
is a salutary principle that allows families who quite probably have
gone through searing
challenges individually or collectively to
remain together or to be reunited. However, at the same time, the Act
creates an understandable
and added level of verification to avoid a
situation where non-qualifying applicants later manufacture a
familial connection or
rely on a refugee’s status and lawful
presence in the Republic to benefit their own applications.
[31]
In summary then, and as long as full disclosure about that spouse or
dependent is made up front,
if an asylum seeker qualifies for refugee
status, their spouse or dependents will likewise be granted asylum –
as an adjunct
to the applicant for asylum.
[32]
That is quite different to the proposition that someone who factually
may be a dependent of a
refugee who has been granted asylum can then
use that dependence as a stand-alone and separate qualifying
criterion to be granted
asylum themselves.
[33]
Such a proposition, as contended for by the applicant, is
inconsistent with the express provisions
of the Act and the obvious
procedural scheme that the Legislature intended. It requires that the
“dependent” as it
appears in section 3 is interpreted in
a vacuum and ignores not only the context in which that provision
appears but also the introductory
words to section 3 – being
“
Subject to Chapter 3
”.
[34]
By definition, a person who applies for refugee status is an
"applicant" who then must
comply with the peremptory
provisions of the Act. Therefore, such an applicant can only be
granted refugee status if they themselves
qualify under section 3(a)
or (b) of the Act and then also comply with the provisions contained
in Chapter 3.
[35]
In these circumstances, Ms. Kapata would have had to demonstrate a
well-founded fear of persecution
by reason of her race, gender,
tribe, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership of a
particular social group or an
inability to remain in her country of
origin because of external aggression, occupation, foreign domination
and so on.
[36]
The applicant did not establish either of these grounds: on her own
version, she departed the
DRC because she was thrown out of her home
due to allegations of infidelity. However unfortunate or unfair these
reasons may be,
the applicant was not compelled to flee for any of
the reasons contemplated in section 3 of the Act.
[37]
In this regard, the criticisms of the respondents were well made, and
I cannot find fault with
their reasons for refusing the applicant’s
application for asylum.
[38]
I readily accept that the applicant is in a difficult financial
position and does not have support
or an infrastructure in the DRC.
That may well constitute a ground upon which she could apply to
immigrate to the Republic, but
it does not mean that she is a
"refugee" as defined in the Act or that she is entitled to
asylum in terms of the Act.
[39]
Even if I am wrong in my interpretation of the Act, and the applicant
is entitled to be granted
asylum if Ms. Kavunga was granted asylum,
there is a fundamental and fatal gap in the information provided by
the applicant.
[40]
Ms Kavunga's temporary asylum permit records that she was entitled to
"reside temporarily
in the Republic of South Africa for the
purpose of applying for asylum in terms of" the Act and that
permit expired on 2 September
2019.
[41]
No information was placed before me that establishes whether Ms.
Kavunga did actually apply or
was in fact granted asylum or that her
temporary permit was extended past the stated expiry date.
[42]
Therefore, there is no evidence that Ms. Kavunga qualified for the
granting of refugee status
which, on any interpretation, would have
been the gateway for the applicant then to have been granted the same
status, as Ms. Kavunga's
dependent.
[43]
In all the circumstances, I must conclude that the first respondent's
decision to refuse Ms.
Kapata’s application for asylum was
legitimate and reasonable. There are no grounds to review the
decision or to set it aside
and the review application must fail.
[44]
It follows that the interim order permitting the applicant by
implication to remain in the Republic
pending the determination of
the application must also now be discharged.
[45]
In the exercise of my discretion, and notwithstanding the conclusions
to which I have come, I
do not believe it to be in the interests of
justice to make any order in respect of the costs of the application.
I
grant the following orders:
(1)
the Order of
this Court granted on 3 May 2019 under case number D3492/2019 is
discharged;
(2)
the
applicant’s application for the review of the first
respondent's decision of 26 March 2018, and the consequential relief
sought, is dismissed.
SHAPIRO
AJ
APPEARANCES
Date of
Hearing:
Thursday, 09 February 2023
Date of Judgment
:
Wednesday, 15 February 2023
Applicant’s
Counsel:
Mr BZ Mthethwa
Instructed
by:
Lawyers for Human Rights
Applicant’s
Attorneys
Room S104, Diakonia
Centre
20
th
Diakonia
Avenue
Durban
(Ref: Z Cele)
(Tel:031 – 301
0531)
Email:
Thandeka@lhr.org.za
First Respondent’s
Counsel:
No appearance
Instructed
by:
Chairperson: Standing Committee for Refugee Affairs
First Respondent
206 Pretorius Street
Pretoria
c/o THE STATE ATTORNEY
FOR KZN
Metlife Building
391 Anton Lembede Street
Durban
(Ref:182/0012594/19/K/P2)
(Tel: 031 – 031 –
365 2557)
Email:
SHassan-Khan@justice.gov.za
SipNxumalo@justice.gov.za
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