Case Law[2025] ZACC 8South Africa
Democratic Alliance v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (CCT 184/23) [2025] ZACC 8; 2025 (7) BCLR 779 (CC); 2025 (4) SA 323 (CC) (6 May 2025)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
6 May 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Citizenship Act 88 of 1995 — confirmation application — constitutionality of section 6(1)(a) — loss of citizenship — order of constitutional invalidity confirmed
Judgment
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# South Africa: Constitutional Court
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## Democratic Alliance v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (CCT 184/23) [2025] ZACC 8; 2025 (7) BCLR 779 (CC); 2025 (4) SA 323 (CC) (6 May 2025)
Democratic Alliance v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (CCT 184/23) [2025] ZACC 8; 2025 (7) BCLR 779 (CC); 2025 (4) SA 323 (CC) (6 May 2025)
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sino date 6 May 2025
FLYNOTES:
CONSTITUTION – Citizenship –
Dual
citizenship
–
Provision
of Act causing South African citizens to lose their citizenship
automatically – When voluntarily acquiring
citizenship in
another country – Supreme Court of Appeal declared the
impugned provision constitutionally invalid –
The
legislation bears no discernible legitimate purpose – Right
to citizenship is of cardinal importance as it provides
access to
a number of other important rights – Order of constitutional
invalidity confirmed –
South African Citizenship Act 88 of
1995
,
s 6(1)(a).
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
CCT
184/23
In
the matter between:
DEMOCRATIC
ALLIANCE
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
DIRECTOR GENERAL,
DEPARTMENT
OF
HOME AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
and
STEVEN
SPADIJER
Amicus Curiae
Neutral
citation:
Democratic Alliance v
Minister of Home Affairs and Another
[2025] ZACC 8
Coram:
Maya CJ, Madlanga ADCJ,
Majiedt J, Mhlantla J,
Seegobin AJ, Theron J, Tolmay AJ and Tshiqi J
Judgment:
Majiedt J (unanimous)
Heard
on:
05 November 2024
Decided
on:
06 May 2025
Summary:
Citizenship Act 88 of 1995 — confirmation
application — constitutionality of section 6(1)(a) —
loss of citizenship — order of constitutional invalidity
confirmed
ORDER
On
application for confirmation of an order of constitutional invalidity
granted by the Supreme Court of Appeal:
1.
The order of constitutional invalidity of the Supreme Court of Appeal
is confirmed.
2.
I
t is declared
that
section 6(1)(a)
of the
South
African Citizenship Act 88 of 1995
is
inconsistent with the Constitution and is invalid from its
promulgation on 6 October 1995.
3.
It is further declared that those citizens who lost their citizenship
by operation of
section 6(1)(a)
of the
South African Citizenship
Act 88 of 1995
are deemed not to have lost their
citizenship
.
4.
The respondents are ordered to pay the applicant’s costs in
this Court, including the
costs of two counsel where so employed.
JUDGMENT
MAJIEDT J
(Maya CJ, Madlanga ADCJ, Mhlantla J, Seegobin AJ,
Theron J, Tolmay AJ and Tshiqi J
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
In
Chisuse
,
[1]
this Court observed that “
[c]itizenship
is the gateway through which a number of rights in the Constitution
can be accessed. It enables a person to
enjoy freedom of
movement, freedom of trade, and political representation.”
[2]
This
case concerns
a
constitutional challenge against section 6(1)(a) (the impugned
provision) of the
South African Citizenship Act
[3]
(the Act). That provision causes South African citizens to
lose their citizenship automatically if they voluntarily
acquire
citizenship in another country, unless they have prior permission
from the Minister of Home Affairs. In relevant
part, the
impugned provision reads:
“
(1)
Subject to the provisions of subsection (2), a South African
citizen shall cease to
be a South African citizen if—
(a)
[that citizen], whilst not being a minor, by some voluntary and
formal act other than
marriage, acquires the citizenship or
nationality of a country other than the Republic . . .
. . .
(2)
Any person referred to in subsection (1) may, prior to [their]
loss of South African
citizenship in terms of this section,
apply to the Minister to retain [their] South African citizenship,
and the Minister may,
if [they] deem it fit, order such retention.”
[2]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal declared the impugned
provision constitutionally invalid from the date of its promulgation
on 6 October 1995.
[4]
That Court made an ancillary order declaring that those citizens who
had lost their citizenship by virtue of that section,
are deemed not
to have lost their citizenship. Lastly, it made a costs order
against the respondents. The matter is
before this Court for
confirmation of the order of constitutional invalidity, in terms of
section 167(5), read with section
172(2)(a) of the Constitution,
and further read with rule 16 of this Court’s Rules.
Although the respondents abide
the decision of this Court, we are
obliged to consider the constitutionality of the section to assess
whether the declaration of
invalidity must be confirmed.
[5]
[3]
The applicant is the Democratic Alliance (DA) and the first
and second respondents are the Minister and Director General of
Home Affairs respectively (collectively, the Department).
Dr Steven Spadijer (Dr Spadijer) was admitted as amicus
curiae (friend of the court), and was confined to making written
submissions. Dr Spadijer holds dual citizenship of
Australia and Montenegro. He worked as a barrister in Australia
before continuing his studies in the United Kingdom where
he obtained
postgraduate qualifications in law. Dr Spadijer explains
that he has, under Article 150 of the Montenegrin
Constitution,
referred a question regarding the constitutionality of Article 24(1)
of the Montenegrin Citizenship Act,
which imposes an
automatic ban on dual citizenship, to the
Montenegrin Constitutional Court. That referral deals
comprehensively with foreign and international human rights law
relating to citizenship.
[4]
Dr Spadijer says that his referral to the
Montenegrin Constitutional Court is a comprehensive
assessment of relevant
international and foreign legal principles and
it would be of assistance to this Court in its determination of the
DA’s application
for confirmation. His amicus
application, ultimately, seeks to place the months of research and
work that went into his Montenegrin Constitutional Court
referral before this Court for its consideration, should those
submissions be of any assistance. His written submissions
cover
two central topics:
(a)
first, foreign and international legal principles as they relate to
dual citizenships, including
the number of states that allow dual
citizenship, foreign jurisdictions that have struck down prohibitions
on dual citizenships,
and international human rights implications for
prohibitions on dual citizenships; and
(b)
second, the South African human rights implications of the impugned
provision. The submissions
consider how the impugned provision
limits, among others, the rights in sections 9, 10, and 33 of
the Constitution.
[5]
The DA launched an application in the High Court of South
Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria (High Court) in which it
sought, broadly, the relief eventually granted in the
Supreme Court of Appeal. It sought a further
order consequential
to the declaration of invalidity “declaring
that all persons [who had lost their citizenship through the
operation of the
impugned provision]
may apply
to the [Minister] in terms of section 15 of the Act for the
appropriate certificate of citizenship”.
[6]
The High Court
dismissed the application with no order as to costs. It held
that the impugned provision is not irrational
and thus does not
offend the principle of legality nor does it infringe any
constitutional rights.
[6]
On appeal to it, with its leave, the Supreme Court of Appeal
upheld the appeal and, as stated, made a declaration
of
constitutional invalidity and granted the further orders.
Litigation
history
[7]
In the High Court, the DA brought the application on
behalf of South Africans who, unbeknown to them and to their
surprise,
had lost their citizenship through the operation of the
impugned provision. To illustrate the effect of that section,
the
DA filed an affidavit by Mr Phillip Plaatjes, a
chartered accountant who was born in Cape Town and who had lost
his South African citizenship in this fashion.
[8]
Mr Plaatjes states that he was born and raised in
Cape Town and left after qualifying as a chartered accountant in
November 2002.
He started working as an English teacher in
South Korea in March 2003. According to Mr Plaatjes,
his departure
was never meant to be permanent, but while in
South Korea he met Ms Karen Crouch, a British citizen,
with whom
he subsequently fell in love. They got married on
27 February 2004, and settled in the United Kingdom
after
Mr Plaatjes obtained work there and acquired a work visa.
[9]
Mr Plaatjes was naturalised as a citizen of the
United Kingdom on 19 November 2007 and received his
British
passport in December 2007. Mr Plaatjes says
that during this period he was under the impression that he would
obtain
citizenship as a consequence of marrying a citizen of another
country, thereby acquiring “dual citizenship”. He
last renewed his South African passport in London in July 2005,
long before he had acquired the equivalence to permanent
residency,
had been naturalised as a citizen, and had received his British
passport.
[10]
In the period between December 2007 and July 2014,
Mr Plaatjes had travelled a number of times to South Africa,
using his South African passport. According to Mr Plaatjes
no one at immigration had, during this time, enquired
whether he had
a second citizenship, even when he travelled with his wife and two
daughters, all who had British citizenship by
way of birth.
Seven years after obtaining his British citizenship he came across an
article online which explained the true
state of affairs – that
South African citizens stand to lose their citizenship where
they voluntarily acquire citizenship
of another country. Only
then did Mr Plaatjes become aware that he did not in fact
acquire British citizenship by marriage
and, in fact, could not have
done so in the first place. Upon further investigation, he
discovered many more people in the
same situation, also as shocked
and confused as he was concerning dual citizenship.
[11]
On 20 July 2015, the expiry date of his
South African passport, Mr Plaatjes went to the
South African embassy
in London, requesting a determination of
his citizenship. He did so because, as a member of the South
African Institute of
Chartered Accountants, integrity is an
important part of his profession. Mr Plaatjes says he
received his passport
back, cut at the corners, with the words
“cancelled” stamped across the pages, as well as a letter
stating that he
committed a voluntary act which resulted in the
automatic loss of his South African citizenship but that he
would, however,
remain a permanent resident of South Africa.
This, he says, was one of the saddest days of his life as he was
desirous
of retaining his South African citizenship.
[12]
The DA contends that it brought its application in defence of
the many South Africans living abroad who have acquired a second
citizenship in good faith and who, like Mr Plaatjes, have been
stripped of their citizenship automatically by operation of
law.
The DA says the application was brought in the public interest.
It states that this automatic loss of citizenship
occurred without
the knowledge of these persons and, on the probabilities, also even
without the knowledge of the Department of
Home Affairs.
[13]
The thrust of the DA’s case in the High Court was
that the impugned provision deprives citizens of their citizenship,
thus violating the right to citizenship enshrined in section 20
of both the Constitution and interim Constitution. Furthermore,
the section does so without affording citizens prior notice, without
a justifiable reason and without any person having taken a
decision
to deprive them of that right.
[14]
The respondents opposed the application. They denied
that the impugned provision is unconstitutional and contended that
the
DA misconstrued the section because they failed to read that
section alongside section 6(2). They contended that the
loss of citizenship under the impugned provision occurs as a result
of a voluntary act on the part of the citizen, not the state,
and
that section 6(2) enables a South African citizen to retain
citizenship on application to the Minister. The
respondents
also argued that the state has a right to regulate the process by
which citizenship is acquired and lost, including
that of dual
citizenship. The Act provides a mechanism by which a citizen
can seek permission to hold dual citizenship and
so, failing that,
the loss of citizenship cannot be said to be effected on a legal
framework that is irrational and unconstitutional.
[15]
The High Court dismissed the DA’s application and
rejected its argument that the impugned provision is irrational
because:
(a)
it serves a legitimate government purpose, namely the state’s
interest in regulating and managing citizenship, given its connection
to the work of government which, in turn, requires a connection
between citizen and country; and
(b)
it is only where a person through a voluntary and formal act
acquires
citizenship of another country, and does not thereafter avail
themselves of the right to approach the Minister for permission
to
retain their South African citizenship, that their citizenship
is lost.
[16]
The High Court held that what was before it in the
proceedings was not a deprivation of citizenship, but a loss of
citizenship,
which the High Court reasoned are two completely
different concepts. That Court referred to the Constitution
which in
section 3 expressly recognises that citizenship may be
lost and, in subsection 3, states that legislation must provide
for the acquisition, loss, and restoration of citizenship.
Section 20, on the other hand, contains a prohibition
against
the deprivation of citizenship. The High Court
further reasoned that, while deprivation of citizenship may lead to
statelessness,
the loss of citizenship carries no such risk as the
condition that must be met for the loss of citizenship to occur is
the acquisition
of citizenship of another country. Thus, when
section 20 of the Constitution is compared to section 6 of
the Act,
it is plain that at the core of section 20 is the right
against statelessness, while the loss of citizenship in terms of
section 6
carries no risk of statelessness as citizenship would
only be lost where citizenship of another country had been acquired.
[17]
The High Court
then had regard to the impugned provision, read with section 6(2),
and held that, when read together, they
serve to inform citizens
about the consequences of voluntarily acquiring citizenship in
another country and provide a way for citizens
to seek permission to
retain their South African citizenship after obtaining other
citizenship. The High Court
laid emphasis on the voluntary
and formal nature of the acquisition of citizenship of another
country.
[7]
In this
context, the High Court held that the loss was not automatic, as
the DA argued, but was more accurately described
as being effected by
operation of law following clearly defined voluntary conduct on the
part of the citizen, as well as a formal
act.
[18]
The High Court reasoned that in law, every South African
citizen who wishes to acquire the citizenship of another country
has
a number of choices:
(a)
Mindful of the consequences of acquiring another citizenship
they may
opt to nevertheless do so and may elect not to retain their
South African citizenship.
(b)
They may wish to retain their South African citizenship
together
with the citizenship of another country. In these situations,
they will have the right to apply for permission to
do so before
acquiring the other citizenship.
(c)
If permission is granted, they may then proceed to obtain the
other
citizenship and hold dual citizenship.
(d)
If permission is refused and subject to their right to challenge
such
refusal, they can then elect whether to proceed to obtain another
citizenship with the knowledge that they will lose their
South African citizenship, or they can elect to retain their
South African citizenship and not seek the citizenship of
another country.
According
to the High Court, if these citizens claim to have been unaware
of these options, or argue that the provision is
unclear, their lack
of knowledge about the law cannot be used to support the argument
that the provision is unconstitutional.
[19]
In relation to the argument that other rights were
unjustifiably limited, the High Court held that, to the extent
that certain
rights can only be exercised by citizens, the loss of
citizenship is not a limitation on the exercise of such rights but
rather
the consequence of no longer enjoying the status of a
citizen. The High Court reasoned that the loss of
citizenship
is clearly a part of the constitutional design of the
overall idea of citizenship, and the language of the Constitution
distinguishes
loss, renunciation and restoration of citizenship as
different features of citizenship, and mandates that there shall be
national
legislation to provide for this. The Act is this
envisioned legislation, providing for the constitutionally mandated
regulation
of loss, renunciation and restoration of citizenship.
Thus, to the extent that it could be said that the impugned
provision
results in a limitation of any rights, that is a limitation
permitted by the terms of the Constitution. The High Court
thus dismissed the application, but made no order as to costs.
[20]
The Supreme Court of Appeal granted leave to
appeal to it and upheld the appeal. It held that, to meet the
standard of rationality, the Minister was required, in the first
place, to explain the specific and legitimate purpose that the
impugned provision was designed to foster. In the absence of
specified reasons, the Court held that the impugned provision
is
arbitrary and irrational. The Court held that there is no
rationale for why an individual adult citizen who applies for
citizenship of another country must, by operation of law, lose their
South African citizenship. Rationality is tested
against
substantively legitimate objects and not by saying that, because the
power may be one that the state could exercise legitimately,
its
existence makes its exercise legitimate. It held further that
the impugned provision is irrational, because it treats
South African
citizens who already have dual citizenship differently from those who
intend to acquire citizenship or nationality
of another country.
[21]
The Supreme Court of Appeal further held that
the purpose of the impugned provision cannot be to regulate the
renunciation
of citizenship, for that would render section 7 of
the Act, which expressly deals with renunciation, nugatory.
Section 7(1)
permits a South African citizen “who intends
to accept the citizenship or nationality of another country, or who
also has
the citizenship or nationality of a country other than the
Republic”, to renounce their South African citizenship.
Moreover, said that Court, section 8(2) expressly recognises
dual citizenship and nationality of another country, where it
provides that the Minister may by order deprive a South African
of citizenship or nationality of another country, if they
have been
sentenced to a certain period of imprisonment, or if it is in the
public interest to do so.
[22]
Finally, the Supreme Court of Appeal held that
the impugned provision unjustifiably limits political rights, the
right to enter and remain in the Republic, and the right to freedom
of trade, occupation and profession, guaranteed by the Constitution
and it declared the section inconsistent with the Constitution.
[23]
Before us, the DA presented argument similar to that advanced
in the previous Courts:
(a)
the impugned provision infringes the right to citizenship contained
in section 20 of both the Constitution and interim Constitution,
as it deprives persons, without their consent or forewarning,
of
their South African citizenship;
(b)
that deprivation lacks any legitimate government purpose to
render it
rational;
(c)
contrary to the initial contention by the respondents that
the
impugned provision exists to allow citizens to give up their
citizenship, it is actually section 7 of the Act that provides
this function;
(d)
the impugned provision cannot be justified by reference to
the
discretion granted to the Minister under section 6(2) of the
Act;
(e)
as the impugned provision is irrational, it cannot be justified
under
section 36 of the Constitution and falls to be declared to be
invalid; and
(f)
there is common ground between the parties that there
is no need for
the suspension or limitation of the retrospectivity of the
declarations of invalidity.
[24]
As stated, the Department abides this Court’s decision
and states that their submissions had been filed to assist this Court
in the interpretation of the impugned provision. Nonetheless,
in the written submissions before this Court the Department
supported
the approach, interpretation and conclusions of the High Court,
but at the hearing no further submissions were made
in this respect.
Analysis
[25]
The crucial
importance of citizenship has been noted.
[8]
An oft quoted truism is that every person has “a right to have
rights”. In her seminal work, Arendt persuasively
argues
that this “right to have rights” emanates from
citizenship and belonging to a distinct national community.
[9]
Citizenship has been described as a revered and “cherished
status” and the right to citizenship has been said
by the
US Supreme Court to be “the most precious of
all”.
[10]
It is a
right of which one should not be lightly deprived.
[11]
The stark reality of the impugned provision is that the loss of
citizenship occurs automatically without the knowledge, consent
and
any input of the citizen concerned. That legal position must be
assessed against the backdrop of the provisions in the
Constitution
that deal with citizenship.
[26]
Section 3 of the Constitution is headed “Citizenship”.
It reads:
“
(1)
There is a common South African citizenship.
(2)
All citizens are—
(a)
equally entitled to the rights, privileges and benefits of
citizenship; and
(b)
equally subject to the duties and responsibilities of citizenship.
(3)
National legislation must provide for the acquisition, loss and
restoration of citizenship.”
[27]
Citizenship is protected by the Constitution in section 20,
by expressly providing that “[n]o citizen may be deprived
of
citizenship”. Importantly, that section forms part of
Chapter 2 of the Bill of Rights. In
Chisuse
, this
Court extensively adumbrated the importance of citizenship in the
context of the maleficent historical deprivation of citizenship
in
this country. In this regard, the Court cited the moving lament
by Sol Plaatje:
“
For
to crown all our calamities, South Africa has by law ceased to
be the home of any of her native children whose skins are
dyed with a
pigment that does not conform with the regulation hue.”
[12]
[28]
This Court emphasised further:
“
Citizenship
and equality of citizenship are therefore matters of considerable
importance in South Africa, particularly bearing
in mind the
abhorrent history of citizenship deprivation suffered by many in
South Africa over the last 100 and more years.
Citizenship
is not just a legal status. It goes to the core of a person’s
identity, their sense of belonging
in a community and, where
xenophobia is a lived reality, to their security of person.
Deprivation
of, or interference with, a person’s citizenship status affects
their private and family life, their choices as
to where they can
call home, start jobs, enrol in schools and form part of a community,
as well as their ability to fully participate
in the political sphere
and exercise freedom of movement
.”
[13]
(Emphasis added.)
[29]
The Act is the national legislation contemplated in
section 3(3) of the Constitution. I
t
came into effect on 6 October 1995. One of the
objectives of the Act, as outlined in its Preamble, is “to
provide for the acquisition, loss and resumption of South African
citizenship”. The Act makes provision in chapter 2
for the acquisition of South African citizenship as follows: by
birth (section 2); descent (section 3); naturalisation
(section 4); or by grant by the Minister of a certificate of
naturalisation to any foreigner who meets certain specified
requirements (section 5).
[30]
Loss of
citizenship has severe consequences, set out in section 11(3) of
the Act. It entails being deemed, for the purposes
of the
Immigration Act,
[14]
to be a foreigner, who is
not in possession or deemed to be in possession of a permit referred
to in section 10(2) or section 25(2)
of that Act; or in
terms of section 31(2)(a) of that Act, not exempted or deemed to
be not exempted from the provisions of
section 10(1) of that
Act.
[31]
Section 7 of the Act regulates the renunciation of
citizenship. It reads:
“
(1)
A South African citizen who intends to accept the citizenship or
nationality of another
country, or who also has the citizenship or
nationality of a country other than the Republic, may make a
declaration in the prescribed
form renouncing his or her
South African citizenship.
(2)
The Minister shall upon receipt of a declaration made under this
section cause such
declaration to be registered in the manner
prescribed, and thereupon the person who made the declaration shall
cease to be a South African
citizen.
(3)
Whenever a person ceases under subsection (2) to be a
South African citizen,
[their] children who are under the age of
18 years shall also cease to be South African citizens if the
other parent of such
children is not, or does not remain, a
South African citizen.”
[32]
For the sake of completeness, reference must be made to the
provisions in the Act which regulate the deprivation of citizenship,
namely, sections 8 and 10. They read:
“
8.
Deprivation
of citizenship
(1)
The Minister may by order deprive any South African citizen by
naturalisation
of
[their]
South African
citizenship if
[they are]
satisfied that—
(a)
the certificate of
naturalisation was obtained by means of fraud, false representation
or the concealment of a material fact; or
(b)
such certificate was
granted in conflict with the provisions of this Act or any prior law.
(2)
The Minister may by order deprive a South African citizen who
also has the citizenship
or nationality of any other country of
[their]
South African
citizenship if—
(a)
such citizen has at
any time been sentenced in any country to a period of imprisonment of
not less than 12 months for any offence
which, if it was
committed outside the Republic, would also have constituted an
offence in the Republic; or
(b)
the Minister is
satisfied that it is in the public interest that such citizen shall
cease to be a South African citizen.
(3)
Whenever the Minister deprives a person of [their] South African
citizenship
under this section or section 10, that person shall
cease to be a South African citizen with effect from such date
as
the Minister may direct and thereupon the certificate of
naturalisation or any other certificate issued under this Act in
relation
to the status of the person concerned, shall be surrendered
to the Minister and cancelled, and any person who refuses or fails on
demand to surrender any such certificate which [they have] in [their]
possession, shall be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction
to
a fine or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding five years, or
to both such fine and imprisonment.
9.
. . .
10.
Deprivation of citizenship in case of children
Whenever
the responsible parent of a minor has in terms of the provisions of
section 6 or 8 ceased to be a South African
citizen, the
Minister may, with due regard to the provisions of the
Children’s Act, order that such minor, if
[they
were]
born
outside the Republic and [are] under the age of 18 years, shall
cease to be a South African citizen.”
[33]
The primary challenge in respect of the unconstitutionality of
the impugned provision is that it infringes section 20 of the
Constitution, that no citizen may be deprived of citizenship.
This raises the central issue whether the automatic,
ex lege
(by law) loss of citizenship constitutes a de facto (factual)
deprivation of citizenship and thus constitutes an infringement
of
the constitutional right to citizenship. Put differently –
is there a distinction between the automatic
loss of citizenship as
it occurs under the impugned provision and a de facto deprivation of
citizenship, as the High Court
held?
[34]
Where a citizen voluntarily and formally acquires citizenship
or nationality of another country, section 6(2) of the Act
requires
that citizen to seek permission from the Minister of Home
Affairs to retain their South African citizenship. A
failure
to do so results in the automatic cessation of South African
citizenship by virtue of the impugned provision, read with
section 6(2).
The loss eventuates as a matter of course by operation
of law through a voluntary and formal act (except marriage) and the
lack
of permission granted by the Minister for the retention of the
citizenship.
[35]
The High Court,
it will be recalled, laid much emphasis on what it perceived as the
dichotomy between the loss and deprivation
of citizenship. It
underscored the difference in the wording of the text between
sections 3 and 20 in relation to this
dichotomy. According
to that Court, deprivation of citizenship within its constitutional
meaning in section 20 pertains
to a prohibition of citizenship,
rendering a South African citizen stateless.
[15]
Loss and deprivation of citizenship are separate concepts in the
context of the Constitution and the Act, and the language
of
section 20 cannot be used to house a claim concerning the loss
of citizenship, said the High Court.
[16]
This was the primary basis for that Court’s rejection of the
DA’s constitutional challenge.
[36]
The Cambridge English Dictionary defines the verb “to
deprive” as to “take something away from someone”.
“Loss” is more passive in nature: “to no
longer have something or have less of something”.
The
Oxford Dictionary defines the two concepts thus: “to deprive”
means “to dispossess (a person) of a thing,
experience, status,
etc.” “Loss”, on the other hand, means “not
retained in possession”.
[37]
As I see it, the
distinction between the automatic loss of citizenship occasioned by
the impugned provision is more apparent than
real and more semantic
than substantive, a distinction without a difference. Where the
law automatically terminates a citizen’s
“cherished and
revered status” and closes the “gateway to a number of
rights”, without any forewarning
and even knowledge of the
citizen (and possibly even the Department itself) simply on account
of dual citizenship, it is plainly
a deprivation of citizenship.
The legislative scheme is such that, without a discernible lawful
purpose, the citizen
ex
lege
loses
citizenship, something that the Supreme Court of Appeal
correctly described as “capricious”.
[17]
[38]
But, even if there
was this artificial distinction (I reiterate that I do not see any),
the automatic loss of citizenship brought
about by the impugned
provision is a form of deprivation in contravention of the
fundamental right contained in section 20.
Axiomatically,
all law is subject to and must comply with the Constitution,
[18]
and section 8(1) of the Constitution in no uncertain terms
declares that “
the
Bill of Rights applies to all law, and binds the
legislature, the executive, the judiciary and all organs of state”.
Inasmuch
as the Act is the legislation contemplated in section 3(3) of
the Constitution, it cannot subvert other rights contained
in the
Constitution and must conform with the Bill of Rights.
The right to citizenship is entrenched in the Bill of Rights
and can in terms of section 36 not be infringed upon or limited
without justification.
[39]
Stripping citizens
of the entrenched right in section 20 can only legitimately
occur through renunciation in terms of section 7
of the Act and
in a fashion that does not lead to statelessness. As stated,
the right to citizenship is of cardinal importance
as it provides
access to a number of other important rights like political
rights,
[19]
freedom of movement and
residence rights
[20]
and freedom of trade,
occupation and profession rights,
[21]
as emphasised by this
Court in
Chisuse
.
[22]
Deprivation of
citizenship, thus, occasions loss of these other constitutional
rights embodied in sections 19, 21 and 22.
[40]
Regarding this approach by the High Court, Bilchitz and
Ziegler state:
“
There is nothing
in section 20 to suggest that it only applies in cases where the
deprivation of citizenship results in statelessness.
Whereas
the detrimental effects of a deprivation of citizenship differ, inter
alia, based on whether it leads to statelessness
(which is a
particularly egregious form of deprivation), the literal meaning of
this provision is that ‘no citizen’
may be deprived of
their citizenship: hence, any form of deprivation of citizenship
under any circumstances constitutes a prima
facie infringement of
section 20, requiring justification.”
[23]
[41]
I agree. Deprivation is, as they state, a broader
concept entailing any active removal of citizenship, irrespective of
whether
it leaves an individual stateless. This interpretation
accords with the text of section 20, which unconditionally
prohibits
depriving any citizen of citizenship and, where deprivation
occurs, it must be justified under section 36 of the
Constitution.
In contrast, loss denotes a more passive state,
where citizenship is no longer held without direct action taken to
remove it.
The authors rightly argue that section 20
prohibits active deprivation without justification. This
reasoning is persuasive
since it captures the constitutional
protections surrounding citizenship more robustly, emphasising that
any active removal of
citizenship is prima facie (on the face of
it) an infringement that bears justification in terms of
section 36(1) of
the Constitution.
[42]
Plainly then, even on the High Court’s incorrect
approach, the impugned provision infringes the right to citizenship.
We were told both in the respondents’ answering papers and
their oral submissions in this Court that the state has no objection
to dual citizenship. They argued that the impugned provision,
read with other related sections in the Act, is not averse
to dual
citizenship. The respondents asserted that South Africa,
like many other countries, permits dual citizenship
with selected
countries, by prior arrangement. According to them,
South Africans who take up citizenship of one of the
countries
which has a dual citizenship arrangement with South Africa, do
not lose their South African citizenship and
need not apply to
the Minister for permission to retain their South African
citizenship.
[43]
The respondents’ defence was twofold: first that the
state has a right to regulate the process by which citizenship is
acquired
and lost, including that of dual citizenship which under the
impugned provision occurs through a voluntary act by the citizen; and
second, that section 6(2) is a “saving enactment” of
sorts. The first defence has been adequately addressed,
but I
add a few further observations before considering the second
contention.
[44]
It bears emphasis that the limitation of the right to
citizenship by the impugned provision serves no legitimate government
purpose.
Save for arguing that the state has a right to
regulate the acquisition and loss of citizenship, which is what,
according to the
state, the impugned provision lawfully does, no
other legitimate purpose was advanced. That argument has
already been firmly
dispelled. The rationale behind this
legislation remains unexplained. That legislative scheme not
only flies in the
face of the respondents’ avowed lack of
aversion to dual citizenship but also bears no discernible legitimate
purpose.
[45]
Legislation is
constitutionally required to be rationally related to a legitimate
government purpose – if not, it is invalid.
[24]
The test imposes a relatively minimal requirement: an identification
of a legitimate government purpose and a link between
the adopted
means and that purpose. In the case of the impugned provision
there is no such link.
[46]
With regard to the second defence – it was not a defence
at all. Section 6(2) seeks to avert the loss of
citizenship,
which is otherwise automatic. The antecedent
question is why citizenship must be lost in the first place.
For the reasons
stated before, there is no reason at all. The
existence of a ministerial power to exercise a discretion in terms of
section 6(2)
to alter what is otherwise an automatic loss of
citizenship is no answer to the antecedent question.
[47]
Whilst I do not consider it necessary to deal with the nature
of the discretion contained in section 6(2), I cannot but make
the following observations about it. Section 6(2) provides
no criteria at all on how the Minister’s discretion
is to be
exercised and what its bounds are. The Minister is simply given
unconstrained free rein by the section to determine
in her
untrammelled discretion whether to permit dual citizenship. The
Supreme Court of Appeal rightly observed:
“
What
then is the purpose of the automatic loss of citizenship in
section 6(1)(a)? That remains unspecified. And
it
cannot be a legitimate object to threaten the deprivation of
citizenship so as to invest the Minister with power to avoid that
consequence. If that were so, every arbitrary deprivation would
be transformed into the legitimate exercise of power simply
because
the Minister is given an untrammelled discretion to avoid that
outcome. In sum, to deprive a citizen of their rights
of
citizenship for no reason is irrational.”
[25]
[48]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal cannot be faulted for then
concluding in light of this observation that section 6(2)
merely
“underscores the arbitrariness and irrationality of [the
impugned provision]”.
[26]
The High Court’s reasoning as an imprimatur for this
automatic forfeiture of citizenship merely because they acquired
another citizenship is singularly unpersuasive
.
The Legislature has offered no clear basis why dual citizenship
is a problem; on the contrary, we were made to understand
that dual
citizenship is permissible, subject only to ministerial discretion.
The reason for this conditionality is unclear
and utterly
irrational. What we are left with is the bald assertion that
the retention or loss of citizenship is itself a
legitimate use of
power. That is beyond comprehension. It is circular
reasoning to argue that, because the power may
be one that the state
could exercise, its existence makes its exercise legitimate.
After all, rationality must be determined
against substantively
legitimate objects.
[27]
[49]
According
to the High Court’s reasoning,
states
have an interest in regulating citizenship, given the significance of
the status and the link between citizenship and the
work of the
government. In this country, for example, said the High Court,
holding South African citizenship is
a precondition, in many
instances, for holding certain public offices. Thus, reasoned
the High Court, a connection between
citizen and country is
required, and when a citizen through a voluntary act acquires the
citizenship of another country, and does
not avail themselves of the
right to approach the Minister to seek permission to retain their
South African citizenship, it
can hardly be said that the loss
of citizenship that follows is irrational.
[28]
[50]
As stated, in their written submissions in this Court the
respondents supported the reasoning and outcome of the High Court’s
judgment, but they made no further oral submissions. As I see
it, the automatic loss of citizenship and its consequential
effect
far outweighs regulation as a legitimate government purpose.
There is no conceivable purpose nor rational connection
why a
South African should automatically lose their citizenship by
acquiring the citizenship of another country, particularly
with the
increasing cross-border migration of people. Absent any check
on the unfettered power of the Minister to make decisions
involving
who loses or retains South African citizenship, the impugned
provision is constitutionally invalid.
[51]
This Court has
firmly set its face against unbounded and undefined discretionary
power. In
Dawood
,
[29]
this Court held:
“
There
is . . . a difference between requiring a court or tribunal
in exercising a discretion to interpret legislation
in a manner that
is consistent with the Constitution and conferring a broad discretion
upon an official, who may be quite untrained
in law and
constitutional interpretation, and expecting that official, in the
absence of direct guidance, to exercise the discretion
in a manner
consistent with the provisions of the Bill of Rights.
Officials are often extremely busy and have to
respond quickly
and efficiently to many requests or applications. The nature of
their work does not permit considered reflection
on the scope of
constitutional rights or the circumstances in which a limitation of
such rights is justifiable. It is true
that as employees of the
State they bear a constitutional obligation to seek to promote the
Bill of Rights as well.
But it is important to
interpret that obligation within the context of the role that
administrative officials play in the framework
of government, which
is different from that played by judicial officers.”
[30]
[52]
It further held:
“
[I]f
broad discretionary powers contain no express constraints, those who
are affected by the exercise of the broad discretionary
powers will
not know what is relevant to the exercise of those powers or in what
circumstances they are entitled to seek relief
from an adverse
decision
. . . .
In the case of the statutory discretion at hand, there is no
provision in the text providing guidance
as to the circumstances
relevant to a refusal to grant or extend a temporary permit. I
am satisfied, that in the absence
of such provisions, it would not
promote the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights
for this Court to try
to identify the circumstances in which the
refusal of a temporary permit to a foreign spouse would be
justifiable. Nor can
we hold in the present case that it is
enough to leave it to an official to determine when it will be
justifiable to limit the
right in the democratic society contemplated
by section 36. Such an interpretation, of which there is
no suggestion
in the Act, would place an improperly onerous burden on
officials, which in the constitutional scheme should properly be
borne
by a competent legislative authority. Its effect is
almost inevitably that constitutional rights (as in the case of two
of
the respondents before this Court) will be unjustifiably limited
in some cases. Of even greater concern is the fact that those
infringements may often go unchallenged and unremedied.”
[31]
[53]
The impugned provision therefore cannot pass constitutional
muster. First, section 6(2) cannot save it from
unconstitutionality,
because the section does not address the
question why there is automatic loss of citizenship in the first
place. Second,
section 6(2) affords the Minister broad,
unchecked power without any guidelines as to how the Minister’s
decisions are
to be made. This is untenable, given the
infringement of citizenship as a fundamental right. This is
exacerbated by
the consequential loss of the enjoyment of other
fundamental rights.
[54]
Section
6(2)
affords the Minister the discretionary power to, as she deems fit,
order the retention of citizenship. It bears repetition
that
this is an unconstrained discretion without any specification as to
how such discretion is to be exercised. There is
no indication
at all regarding what facts, factors and circumstances would guide
the Minister in deciding either way on the retention
of citizenship.
Thus, there can be no meaningful assessment of the reasons for the
decision that may support retention, nor,
by implication, what it is
that requires the loss of citizenship. I agree with the
Supreme Court of Appeal
that “the scheme of the
legislation, automatic loss, subject to unbounded discretionary
retention, is a recipe for capricious
decision-making, without the
specification of legitimate objects”.
[32]
[55]
While
constitutional validity is always tested objectively,
[33]
the plight of Mr Plaatjes vividly demonstrates the irrationality
of the impugned provision. He lost his South African
citizenship without his knowledge and against his wishes to remain a
citizen of this country. Mr Plaatjes discovered
by chance
that he was no longer a South African citizen. It seems
that even the Department and its officials were under
the
misapprehension that he was still a citizen of this country.
That explains why, between December 2007 and July 2014,
Mr Plaatjes had travelled to this country numerous times, using
his South African passport. According to him, no
one at
immigration had, during this time, enquired whether he had a second
citizenship, even where he was travelling with his wife
and two
daughters, who all had British citizenship by way of birth.
This automatic loss of citizenship, unbeknown to him
(and maybe even
to the Department), without any hearing whatsoever, is a
constitutional aberration.
[56]
As the amicus’
comprehensive submissions demonstrate, the High Court’s
reasoning is out of step with international
instruments and
international law. There are no specific provisions in
international law on dual citizenship, and in accordance
with the
principle of state sovereignty each state may make provision for
this. Many have done so. The amicus’
affidavit and
written submissions provide useful insight into the global position.
In 1960, some 62% of countries prohibited
dual citizenship.
However, by 2020, 76% of countries allow its ethnic citizens to
voluntarily acquire the citizenship of
another country, without
automatic repercussions for their citizenship of origin. A
breakdown of these figures shows that
dual citizenship is allowed as
follows: 93% of countries in Oceania; 91% in the Americas; 70%
in Africa; 65% in Asia; and
80% of European countries. In the
European context, the entire European Union (EU) project presupposes
dual loyalty, that
is, loyalty to the EU and its institutions through
EU citizenship, and loyalty to the nation state. According to
legal commentators,
in a world of increasing globalisation and
transnational mobility, permitting dual citizenship is the norm and
not the exception.
[34]
[57]
Many countries,
including a few in Africa, expressly provide for a right to dual
citizenship. Article 36 of the Constitution
of Cuba
provides: “the acquisition of other citizenship does not imply
the loss of Cuban citizenship”.
[35]
The Zambian Constitution provides in Article 39(1) that “[a]
citizen shall not lose citizenship by acquiring the
citizenship of
another country”. Article 8(1) of the Constitution
of Ghana provides: “[a] citizen of Ghana
may hold the
citizenship of any other country in addition to [their] citizenship
of Ghana”.
[36]
[58]
The constitutions
of a number of countries provide that citizenship may be lost only
through voluntary renunciation – by implication
excluding a
loss of citizenship due only to dual citizenship. For example,
the Constitution of Albania provides in Article 19(2):
“[a]n
Albanian citizen may not lose [their] citizenship, except when [they]
[give] it up”. Similar provisions
can be found in the
constitution of the Slovak Republic.
[37]
[59]
Foreign case law
provides useful insight into the approach to the deprivation of
citizenship beyond our shores. In
Schneider
[38]
the Supreme Court of the United States (US Supreme Court)
had to consider the legal position of Ms Angelika
Schneider, a
German immigrant and citizen, who came to the US with her parents and
became a citizen at 16 years of age. When
she graduated
from college, Ms Schneider moved abroad and later resided in
Germany. The State Department claimed
that Ms Schneider
had lost her US citizenship in accordance with a section of the
Immigration and Nationality Act, which revoked
the citizenship of any
naturalised citizen who returned to their country of birth and
remained there for at least three years.
The US Supreme Court
declared this law to be unconstitutional. The Court held that
naturalised US citizens have the
right to return to and reside in
their native countries, and retain their US citizenship, even if they
never return to the US.
[39]
[60]
In another matter
later before the US Supreme Court,
Afroyim
,
the central question before the Court was whether one can
automatically lose one’s citizenship simply by voting in a
foreign
election, when they have not renounced their citizenship.
Mr Beys Afroyim, a Polish-Latvian Jew, immigrated to the US
and,
in 1926, became a naturalised US citizen. In 1950, Mr Afroyim,
a dual citizen of the US and Poland, travelled to
Israel and, while
there, participated in an Israeli election. When he
subsequently tried to renew his US passport, the US
government
refused, arguing that he automatically lost his citizenship by voting
in a foreign election. The US Supreme Court
held that,
because of the Fourteenth Amendment, Mr Afroyim could not
be stripped of his citizenship without his assent.
The Court
held that section 401(e) of the Nationality Act, providing for
automatic loss of citizenship for voting in a foreign
election, was
unconstitutional.
[40]
[61]
Closer to home, in
Mathe
,
[41]
the Botswana High Court was recently faced with the legal
question whether children who were dual citizens of Botswana and
other countries could be compelled to give up one nationality in
favour of the other. Section 15 of the Citizenship Act
required a citizen of Botswana who is born with dual citizenship
to renounce their foreign citizenship in order to retain
their
Botswanan citizenship once they turn 21 years of age.
Ms Mathe, a citizen of Botswana, was also a Norwegian
citizen.
Her son and daughter were dual citizens who held both Botswanan and
Norwegian citizenship. Ms Mathe and
the other applicants
in the case argued that the requirement for their children to choose
one nationality over another –
an emotional and daunting
process – denied them their right to equal protection
(section 3 of the Constitution of Botswana),
freedom of
association (section 13), freedom of movement (section 14),
anti discrimination based on place of origin
(section 15),
and the right to vote (section 67).
[62]
The Botswana
High Court upheld these arguments. It held that to require
children to renounce one citizenship in favour
of the other violated
sections 3, 13, 14, 15 and 67 of the Constitution of Botswana,
as well as a general implied right to
human dignity. The Court
held that choosing one citizenship over another can be a gruelling
and painful choice, generating
a strong sense of deprivation.
Such a requirement of renunciation would, on a general scale, affect
the individual more than
it affects the state.
[42]
[63]
The European Court of Human Rights and the Court of
Justice of the European Union require deprivations of
citizenship
to occur only after a careful, consequential, and case by
case proportionality assessment. This assessment must consider:
(a)
the length of time one
has already had and enjoyed their citizenship;
[43]
(b)
whether there are perfectly legitimate or wholly innocuous
reasons
for taking out a second citizenship;
(c)
the economic, social, or
psychological impact citizenship-stripping might have on a person,
including any direct effect on the usual
or normal development of
their private or professional life as well as the effect
citizen-stripping might have on the person’s
family;
[44]
and
(d)
whether the person might
subsequently have grave difficulties obtaining identity documents
such as a passport or identity document
from the second country whose
citizenship they have acquired or local identity documents needed to
credibly engage in the full
social and economic life.
[45]
[64]
International law
generally acknowledges that it is in principle legitimate for a state
to wish to protect the special relationship
of solidarity, loyalty,
and good faith between it and its nationals, and the reciprocity of
rights and duties, which form the bedrock
of the bond of
nationality.
[46]
But, as
legal commentators state, the concept of loyalty has undergone
fundamental change. As Spiro observes:
“
Today
the loyalty objection to dual citizenship is flimsy. Competition
among nation states may once have been zero-sum.
In that
context, there was at least a possible theoretical foundation for the
loyalty objection: what was good for one country
of nationality would
necessarily be bad for the other. But that is hardly a
sustainable perspective on interstate relations
today. There
are few issues on which a win for one state represents a loss for
another. On the contrary, global issues
are now mostly common
issues, in which coordinated international action results in
aggregate gains for all states.”
[47]
Conclusion
and remedy
[65]
In sum then, the impugned provision is unconstitutional as it
infringes the right to citizenship entrenched in section 20 of
the Constitution and, consequentially, other constitutional rights –
namely
political
rights, the right to enter and remain in South Africa and the
right to freedom of trade, occupation and profession.
The
impugned provision must be struck
down
.
As stated, there was no dispute regarding the suspension and
limitation of the retrospectivity of the declaration of invalidity.
[66]
Careful
consideration was given in the Supreme Court of Appeal
regarding the remedy that would grant the most effective
relief.
Again, that Court cannot be faulted for the conclusion it reached
based upon its unassailable reasoning. As
that Court stated,
section 172(1) of
the Constitution requires that, where legislation fails to pass
constitutional muster, a declaration of constitutional
invalidity
must be made, including any order that is just and equitable.
[48]
That Court thus struck down the offending part of the impugned
provision and ordered that the striking down be with immediate
effect, to take effect from the date of its enactment,
6 October 1995.
[67]
Effective relief
as envisaged in section 38 of the Constitution is the remedy
that would be suitable and just, that would not
only vindicate the
rights of the aggrieved individual, but also uphold and protect the
Constitution. As this Court stated
in
Fose
,
[49]
“
the
harm caused by
violating
the
Constitution is a harm to the society as a whole, even where the
direct implications of the violation are highly parochial”.
[50]
I
n
Steenkamp
,
[51]
this Court explained:
“
In each case the
remedy must fit the injury. The remedy must be fair to those
affected by it and yet vindicate effectively
the right violated. It
must be just and equitable in the light of the facts, the implicated
constitutional principles, if
any, and the controlling law.”
[52]
[68]
The
Act came into effect on 6 October 1995, when the
interim Constitution was still in force. The interim
Constitution
was
repealed
by the final Constitution which came into effect on 4 February 1997.
The Act was inconsistent with the
interim Constitution and
remained so when the current Constitution took effect. To the
extent that it was inconsistent with
the interim Constitution, it was
therefore invalid and unconstitutional. The declaration of
invalidity should therefore take
effect from the date of its
promulgation on 6 October 1995
.
[53]
There is no need for a
suspension order and the Department accepted throughout this
litigation that, in the event of a striking
down of the impugned
section, such suspension would be unnecessary.
[69]
The DA is entitled to its costs. What remains is to
acknowledge the helpful written submissions of the amicus curiae,
Dr Spadijer,
particularly with regard to international law.
Order
[70]
I make the following order:
1.
The order of constitutional invalidity of
the Supreme Court of Appeal
is confirmed.
2.
I
t
is declared
that
section 6(1)(a)
of the
South African Citizenship Act 88
of 1995
is inconsistent with the Constitution and
is invalid from its promulgation on 6 October 1995.
3.
It is further
declared that those citizens who lost their citizenship by operation
of
section 6(1)(a)
of the
South African Citizenship Act 88
of 1995
are deemed not to have lost their citizenship
.
4.
The respondents are
ordered to pay the applicant’s costs in this Court, including
the costs of two counsel where so employed.
For the Applicants:
A Katz SC
and D Simonsz instructed by Minde Schapiro and Smith
Incorporated
For the Respondent:
W R Mokhare SC
and M Zondo instructed by Office of the State Attorney,
Johannesburg
For the Amicus
Curiae:
E Cohen
instructed by Ian Levitt Attorneys
[1]
Chisuse
v Director
-
General
of Home Affairs
[2020]
ZACC 20
;
2020 (6) SA 14
(CC);
2020 (10) BCLR 1173
(CC).
[2]
Id
at
para 24.
[3]
88 of 1995.
[4]
Democratic
Alliance v Minister of Home Affairs
[2023]
ZASCA 97
;
2023 (6) SA 156
(SCA) (Supreme Court of Appeal judgment).
[5]
Phillips
v Director of Public Prosecutions
[2003]
ZACC 1
;
2003 (3) SA 345
(CC);
2003 (4) BCLR 357
(CC) at para 8.
[6]
Democratic
Alliance v Minister of Home Affairs
[2021]
ZAGPPHC 500 (High Court judgment).
[7]
The High Court stated that this could relate to “the taking of
an oath of allegiance, a formal swearing in ceremony, the
issue of a
citizenship certificate or some similar act in recognition of the
acquisition of citizenship”.
[8]
Chisuse
above n 1. See
also, further afield,
Alvin
Teage
Jalloh
v Olubankie King-Akerele
et
al Petition In Re: Constitutionality of
Sections 22.1
and
22.2
of
the Aliens and Nationality Law
Supreme
Court of the Republic of Liberia (23 December 2019) at 7:
“Once acquired, citizenship is the pillar
that secures all
other rights and privileges Liberians enjoy, including the right to
life and the right to own real property,
etc.”;
R
(Johnson) v Secretary
of State for the Home
Department
[2016] UKSC 56
at
para 2: “There are many benefits to being a British
citizen, among them the right to vote, the right to live and
to work
here without needing permission to do so, and everything that comes
along with those rights.”;
Secretary
of State for the Home Department v Al-Jedda
[2013]
UKSC 62
at para 12; and
2
BvR 2236/04
Bundesverfassungsgericht
(18 July 2005) at B.I(1)(a)66: “[C]itizenship
is the legal prerequisite for an equal
civic status, which on the
one hand establishes equal duties, but on the other hand, and above
all, establishes the rights whose
guarantee legitimises public
authority in a democracy.”
[9]
Arendt
The
Origins of Totalitarianism
2
ed (Meridian Books, New York 1958) at 296-7.
The
Canadian Supreme Court cites this and
Kesby
The
Right to Have Rights: Citizenship, Humanity, and International Law
(Oxford
University Press, New York 2012) at 5
in
Divito
v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness)
[2013] 3 SCR 157
at
para 21.
[10]
Knauer
v United States
[1946] USSC 112
;
(1946)
328 US 654
at 658, 674 and 679.
[11]
Afroyim
v Rusk
(1967)
387 US 253
at 267-8: “Citizenship is no light trifle to be
jeopardised any moment Congress decides to do so under the name of
one
of its general or implied grants of power”.
[12]
Chisuse
above n 1 at
para 27 citing
Plaatje
Native
Life in South Africa
(Picador
Africa, Johannesburg 2007) at 68.
[13]
Chisuse
id at
para 28.
[14]
13 of 2002.
[15]
High Court judgment above n 6 at para 25.
[16]
Id
at para 61.
[17]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 4 at
para 31.
[18]
Section 2 of the Constitution: “T
his
Constitution is the supreme law of the Republic; law or conduct
inconsistent with it is invalid, and the obligations imposed
by it
must be fulfilled”. See
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007]
ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC);
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC) at para 35.
[19]
Section 19 of the Constitution.
[20]
Section 21 of the Constitution.
[21]
Section 22 of the Constitution.
[22]
Chisuse
above n 1 at
para 24.
[23]
Bilchitz and Ziegler “Is the Automatic Loss of South African
Citizenship for Those Acquiring Other Citizenships Constitutional?
Democratic
Alliance v Minister of Home Affairs
”
(2023)
39
SAJHR
97
at 105.
[24]
United
Democratic Movement v President of the Republic of South Africa
(No 2)
[2002]
ZACC 21
;
2002 (11) BCLR 1213
(CC);
2003 (1) SA 495
(CC) at para 55.
[25]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 4 at
para 26.
[26]
Id.
[27]
See generally
Democratic
Alliance v President of South Africa
[2012]
ZACC 24
;
2012 (12) BCLR 1297
(CC);
2013 (1) SA 248
(CC) at para 32.
[28]
High Court judgment above n 6 at para 51.
[29]
Dawood
v Minister of Home Affairs; Shalabi v Minister of Home Affairs;
Thomas v Minister of Home Affairs
[2000]
ZACC 8; 2000 (3) SA 936 (CC); 2000 (8) BCLR 837 (CC).
[30]
Id at para 46.
[31]
Id at paras 47 and 50.
[32]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 4 at para 31.
[33]
Ferreira
v Levin
N.O.;
Vryenhoek v Powell N.O.
[1995]
ZACC 13
;
1996 (1) SA 984
(CC);
1996 (4) BCLR 441
(CC) at para 26.
[34]
Boll
Multiple
Nationality and International Law
(Martinus
Nijhoff Publishers, Leiden 2007) at xviii.
[35]
Other countries whose constitutions have similar provisions are Cabo
Verde, Somalia, Seychelles, Venezuela, Colombia and Kyrgyzstan.
[36]
See also Manby
Citizenship
Law in Africa: A Comparative Study
3
ed (African Minds, Cape Town 2016) at 2, 18 and 109-11.
[37]
Constitution of the Slovak Republic, Article 5(2): “No
one shall be deprived of citizenship of the Slovak Republic
against
[their] will”.
[38]
Schneider
v Rusk
[1964] USSC 96
;
377
US 163
(1964).
[39]
Id at 168. The Court cited one of its earlier decisions
in
Kennedy
v Mendoza-Martinez
372
US 144
(1963).
[40]
Id at 267. In a commentary on this decision, Spiro argues
that it is virtually impossible to lose American citizenship
without
formally and expressly renouncing it: Spiro “Afroyim: Vaunting
Citizenship, Presaging Transnationality” in
Martin and Schuck
(eds)
Immigration
Stories
(Foundation
Press, New York 2005) 147 at 163.
[41]
Mathe v
The Attorney General
,
Case No. MAHGB-000321-20, High Court of Republic of Botswana,
29 April 2022.
[42]
Id at para 30.
[43]
Usmanov
v Russia
,
Application No. 43936/18, ECtHR Third Section, 22 December 2020
at para 77.
[44]
JY
v Wiener Landesregierung,
C-118/20,
CJEU, 18 January 2022 at para 59.
[45]
Hashemi
v Azerbaijan
,
Application No. 1480/16, ECtHR Fifth Section, 13 January 2022
at paras 48-9.
[46]
Janko
Rottman v Freistaat Bayern
,
C 135/08, CJEU, 2 March 2010 at para 51.
[47]
Spiro
Citizenship:
What Everyone Needs to Know
(Oxford
University Press, New York 2020) at 98. See also:
Bilchitz and Ziegler above n 23 at 102: “[I]t
is
increasingly recognised that loyalty to one political community in
no way precludes loyalty to another”.
[48]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 4 at para 39.
[49]
Fose
v Minister of Safety and Security
[1997]
ZACC 6; 1997 (3) SA 786 (CC); 1997 (7) BCLR 851 (CC).
[50]
Id
at
para 95.
[51]
Steenkamp
N.O. v Provincial Tender Board of the Eastern Cape
[2006]
ZACC 16; 2007 (3) SA 121 (CC); 2007 (3) BCLR 300 (CC).
[52]
Id
at
para 29.
[53]
Estate
Agency Affairs Board v Auction Alliance (Pty) Ltd
[2014]
ZACC 3
;
2014 (3) SA 106
(CC);
2014 (4) BCLR 373
(CC) at para 47
and
Gory
v Kolver N.O.
[2006]
ZACC 20
;
2007 (3) BCLR 249
(CC);
2007 (4) SA 97
(CC) at para 39.
sino noindex
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