Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 414South Africa
Shamore v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (2024/021421) [2024] ZAGPJHC 414 (2 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 May 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Shamore v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (2024/021421) [2024] ZAGPJHC 414 (2 May 2024)
Shamore v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (2024/021421) [2024] ZAGPJHC 414 (2 May 2024)
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sino date 2 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
FLYNOTES: IMMIGRATION – Asylum seeker –
Detention
–
Applications
for release – Rights of asylum seekers present in South
Africa without valid visa – Approach to lawfulness
of
detention where asylum seeker has intimated an intention to apply
for asylum – Has not been afforded good cause
interview as
prescribed – No good cause interview had been arranged even
though department had every opportunity to
do so –
Applicants release warranted –
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
,
s
49
–
Refugees Act 130 of 1998
, 21(1B) – Refugee
Regulation 8(3).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE: YES
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
3.
REVISED
2
May 2024
In the matter between:
Case No. 2024/021421
ERMAYO
SHAMORE
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
DIRECTOR
GENERAL: DEPARTMENT OF HOMEAFFAIRS
Second
Respondent
LINDELA
REPATRIATION CENTRE
Third Respondent
and the matter between:
Case No. 2024/025071
MUHAMMADI MATI
(Detainee
No. 202402130088)
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
DIRECTOR
GENERAL: DEPARTMENT OF HOME AFFAIRS
Second
Respondent
LINDELA
REPATRIATION CENTRE
Third Respondent
and the matter between:
Case No. 2024/025073
FAIZ RASOOL
(Detainee
No. 202402130113)
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
DIRECTOR
GENERAL: DEPARTMENT OF HOMEAFFAIRS
Second
Respondent
LINDELA
REPATRIATION CENTRE
Third
Respondent
Summary
Applications for release
from immigration detention – rights of asylum seekers present
in South Africa without a valid visa
– approach to lawfulness
of detention where an asylum seeker has intimated an intention to
apply for asylum but has not been
afforded a good cause interview
under Regulation 8 (3) of the Refugee Regulations, 2018 (GN R1707 GG
42932 (1 January 2020)).
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The applicants in each of these three cases, Mr.
Shamore, Mr. Mati and Mr. Rasool, are foreign nationals seeking
asylum in South
Africa. They have each presented themselves at the
Pretoria Refugee Reception Office with the intent to apply for
asylum, but have
been turned away. Mr. Mati and Mr. Rasool say that
they were told that nationals from their country of origin do not
qualify for
asylum at all. Mr. Shamore was told that access to the
office was by appointment only.
The
applicants’ detention and release
2
Each of the applicants was subsequently arrested and
detained under the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
. They were charged and
convicted under
section 49
of the Act for being present in South
Africa without a valid visa. Each of them apparently served a short
prison sentence before
being sent to the Lindela Repatriation Centre
for deportation. Each of the applicants then placed an application
for their release
on my urgent roll for the week of 12 March 2024.
3
Mr. Mati and Mr. Rasool initially sought an order for
their immediate release. They then moderated that relief to a prayer
for an
order interdicting and restraining the first and second
respondents, the Minister and the Director-General, from deporting
them,
and an order directing the respondents to afford them an
interview, during which they could show good cause for entering or
remaining
in South Africa without a valid visa. This interview is
provided for under
section 21
(1B) of the
Refugees Act 130 of 1998
,
read with Regulation 8 (3) of the Refugee Regulations, 2018 (GN R1707
GG 42932 (1 January 2020)). Under Regulation 8 (3), an asylum
seeker
who has entered or is found in South Africa without a valid visa must
show good cause for being without one before they
are permitted to
apply for asylum. Mr. Shamore applied for an order interdicting and
restraining his deportation pending being
afforded such a good cause
interview, which the respondents were required to take “all
necessary steps” to arrange
within 10 days. Mr. Shamore asked
to be released in the event that the respondents did not take those
steps.
4
I granted the orders substantially as prayed for. I
postponed each application to 28 March 2024, with a direction that,
on that
date, the respondents would have to show why the applicants
should not be released. The basis of that order was that, if a good
cause interview had not been arranged by that date, then the
applicants’ detention would likely have become unlawful. This
is the effect of the decision of the Constitutional Court in
Ashebo
v Minister of Home Affairs
2023 (5) SA 382
(CC) (“
Ashebo
”)
(see especially paragraph 58). In
Ashebo
, the Constitutional
Court held that an asylum seeker found in South Africa without a
valid visa can be detained pending a good
cause interview under
Regulation 8 (3), but that the asylum seeker’s detention
becomes unlawful if such an interview is not
organised within a
reasonable time.
5
When the matter was called again on 28 March 2024, the
respondents did not appear, despite having been served with my 12
March 2024
order. However, none of the applicants had filed any
further papers indicating whether a good cause interview had been
arranged.
Accordingly, I postponed the application again, to 15 April
2024. I directed that an affidavit be filed setting out whether a
good
cause interview had been arranged. I gave the respondents a
further opportunity to justify the applicants’ detention.
6
Despite proper service of my order, the respondents
once again failed to appear on 15 April 2024. Each of the applicants
had, however,
filed affidavits confirming that none of them had been
afforded a good cause interview. Accordingly, in the absence of any
justification
at all for the applicants’ ongoing detention, I
ordered that each of the applicants be immediately released. I
directed the
first and second respondents in each case to pay the
applicants’ costs. I indicated at the time that I would give my
reasons
for making these orders in due course. These are my reasons.
The
lawfulness of asylum seeker detention
7
Until fairly recently, the rule was that South Africa
does not place asylum seekers in detention. If an asylum seeker was
arrested
for being unlawfully in the country, they had only to
indicate that they wished to apply for asylum, having not yet been
given
an opportunity to do so. At that point they had to be released
immediately, and afforded the opportunity to apply for asylum under
the
Refugees Act. The
theory underlying this rule was that arrest and
detention as an illegal foreigner under the
Immigration Act could
not
survive an asylum seeker’s intimation that they wished to apply
for asylum, since the entitlement to asylum must be dealt
with under
the
Refugees Act, which
does not authorise the detention of those
seeking refugee status. This was the nett effect of a series of
Supreme Court of Appeal
and Constitutional Court decisions
culminating in
Arbore v Minister of Home Affairs
2022 (2) SA
221
(CC). (See also
Abraham v Minister of Home Affairs
2023
(5) SA 178
(GJ) (“
Abraham
”), especially paragraphs
36.1 to 36.3).
8
It is easy to see why this was the approach. Asylum
seekers are not always able to apply for refugee status at the time
they enter
South Africa. It has to be assumed that any genuine asylum
seeker is in fear for their safety, often without official documents
from their country of origin, frequently in the process of fleeing
persecution without being able to make arrangements for their
arrival
at their country of final destination, and hardly trusting of
official authority of any sort. For these reasons, an asylum
seeker
will often cross the border clandestinely. Once in South Africa, they
are confronted with a severely limited number of refugee
reception
offices (five by my count), and they often face barriers of access to
those offices of the nature each of the applicants
has experienced in
this case. The commitment not to detain those who wish to apply for
asylum was a humane recognition of the fact
that detention for the
purposes of deportation, or in response to the contravention of
immigration rules, should only follow once
it has been established
that an application for asylum is genuinely without merit.
9
On 1 January 2020, however,
section 21
(1B) of the
Refugees Act came
into force. That provision requires that an
aspirant asylum seeker present in South Africa without a valid visa
“
must be interviewed by an immigration
officer to ascertain whether valid reasons exist as to why the
applicant is not in possession
of such visa”.
Section 21
(1B)
must be read with Regulation 8 (3) of the Refugee Regulations, which
provides that an aspirant asylum seeker who does not
possess a valid
visa must “
prior to being
permitted to apply for asylum
show good
cause for his or her illegal entry or stay in the Republic” (my
emphasis).
10
In
Ashebo
the Constitutional Court held that the
“hard-headed and practical” implication of this rule
change was that an asylum
seeker arrested for failing to produce a
valid visa may lawfully be detained under the
Immigration Act until
such time as they have shown good cause for being in South Africa
without one, even if they immediately indicate that they wish
to
apply for asylum. That detention may subsequently become unlawful,
however, if the immigration authorities do not take reasonable
and
prompt steps to allow an aspirant asylum seeker to show such good
cause, and if there is no other basis on which the detention
can be
justified.
The effect of the
decision in
Ashebo
11
In deciding
Ashebo
,
the Constitutional Court declined to follow the decision of the full
court in
Abraham
,
which concluded that the amendments to the
Refugees Act and
Regulations do not fundamentally alter the legal consequences of
intimating an intention to apply for asylum: viz. that asylum
claims
are dealt with under the
Refugees Act, which
does not authorise the
detention of asylum seekers, rather than under the
Immigration Act,
which
does. The court in
Abraham
held that the necessary implication is that an
asylum seeker may not be detained, even if they have yet to show
“good cause”
for being present in South Africa without a
visa. The “good cause” interview is part and parcel of
the asylum process,
during which the state has no general right to
detain an asylum seeker (see
Abraham
,
paragraph 31).
12
The Constitutional Court’s
rejection of the approach taken in
Abraham
appears to have been animated by concerns about
releasing an asylum seeker who had not yet shown that they are
entitled to apply
for asylum, because they had not yet shown good
cause for being present in South Africa without a visa. The problem,
the court
reasoned, was that the aspirant asylum seeker would be
“allowed to remain at large on their mere say-so that they
intend
to seek asylum. That person would remain undocumented and
there would be absolutely no means of checking whether they indeed
promptly
applied for asylum. There would be nothing to stop
them from making the same claim to the next immigration officer who
encounters
them, thus repeatedly preventing their detention”
(
Ashebo
,
paragraph 58).
13
The Constitutional Court’s
apparent fear that asylum seekers may secure their freedom through
multiple acts of bad faith is
not borne out in the cases before me.
The applicants have already tried to apply for asylum at least once.
They have been prevented
from doing so by administrative obstacles
that strike me as both irrational and unlawful. I cannot think of a
lawful or rational
basis upon which nationals of a particular country
could be prevented from applying for asylum, no matter what their
individual
circumstances. But this is what Mr. Rasool and Mr. Mati
say happened to them. Nor can it be rational or lawful to turn an
asylum
seeker away because they have not made an appointment, which
is what Mr. Shamore says happened to him. Those fleeing persecution
will seldom be able to arrange an asylum interview with the
authorities in their country of destination in advance.
14
Having been denied the right to
demonstrate their entitlement to asylum, the applicants were
arrested, and their detention was extended
while the respondents sat
back and took no steps whatsoever to facilitate a good cause
interview.
15
I cannot say whether the failure to
organise a good cause interview in the applicants’ cases is
part of a wider pattern of
behaviour on the respondents’ part,
or whether the facts of this case are an unusual exception to an
otherwise well-oiled
immigration machine, which regularly organises
prompt and fair good cause interviews. It is at least possible,
however, that the
fundamental problem is not that dishonest asylum
seekers may be set free without valid documents, but that the
respondents lack
the capacity or the will to process asylum seekers’
claims promptly and fairly, even when ordered to do so by the High
Court.
The dispiriting implication of this is that the amendments to
the
Refugees Act and
its regulations have done little to improve the
efficiency of the refugee system, while at the same time making
aspirant asylum
seekers more vulnerable to official neglect and
arbitrary detention.
16
The respondents’ failure to
organise good cause interviews in these cases also raises the
possibility that, without court
intervention, the applicants would
have been returned to their country of origin without having had
their asylum claims considered
– all on the basis that they
were found in South Africa without a valid visa and were never given
an opportunity to justify
this.
17
That would obviously be in breach of
South Africa’s international obligations, entrenched in
section
2
of the
Refugees Act, not to
“
refoule”
an asylum seeker by returning them to a
country where they may be subjected to persecution on account of
their race, religion, nationality,
political opinion or membership of
a particular social group. If an asylum seeker is deported without
any consideration of their
asylum claim, there is clearly an
unacceptable risk of refoulement.
The
proper approach in applications for an asylum seeker’s release
18
If the respondents’ approach
to this case is part of a wider pattern of behaviour, then it seems
to me that potentially large
numbers of asylum seekers may be
refouled, in breach of the
Refugees Act and
international law, while
they wait in detention for a good cause interview that never takes
place.
19
In
these circumstances, it is in my view incumbent upon a court faced
with an application for an asylum seeker’s release to
take
positive steps to establish whether there is a lawful basis for the
applicant’s detention, and whether there is a risk
of
refoulement if the asylum seeker is being held pending deportation.
20
Given that
the
law as it currently stands requires that the respondents be afforded
an opportunity to organise a good cause interview, a two-stage
approach seems appropriate.
21
The
first stage is to establish whether a good cause interview has taken
place. There are three possibilities. The first is that
there has
been a good cause interview, at which an immigration officer has
determined whether good cause has been shown. In that
event, the
court is bound by the outcome of the interview, unless a review of
the immigration officer’s decision is properly
before it. If
good cause has been shown, detention must end. If it has not been
shown, detention will continue, assuming it is
consistent with the
rules governing detention under the
Immigration Act.
22
The
second possibility is that there has been no good cause interview,
despite the immigration authorities having had a reasonable
period in
which to organise one. In that event, release must follow on the
decision in
Ashebo
.
23
The
third possibility is that there has been no good cause interview, but
the immigration authorities have not yet had a reasonable
opportunity
to organise one. In that event, a court’s oversight moves to
the second stage.
24
The second stage is to postpone the
application for release for a reasonable but definite period, during
which the immigration authorities
are afforded an opportunity to
organise a good cause interview.
25
On the return day, the court will
release the applicant on the basis set out in paragraph 58 of
Ashebo
if no good cause interview has taken place. If a
good cause interview has taken place and good cause has been found,
release must
also follow, if it has not happened already.
26
In the event that a good cause
interview has taken place, but no good cause has been found,
detention continues subject to the
Immigration Act, but
it may be
appropriate to make an order to protect the applicant’s rights
if the outcome of the interview is to be challenged
by appeal or
review. This may include an order to protect the applicant from
deportation pending any appeal or review. Where the
applicant’s
detention can no longer be justified under the
Immigration Act, an
order for release pending appeal or review may also be appropriate.
However, not yet having been confronted with a case in which
the
respondents have organised a good cause interview, I prefer not to
specify more closely the circumstances in which any order
whether for
release, further detention, or otherwise, should be made.
27
It seems to me that this approach is
consistent with what is said in
Lembore
v Minister of Home Affairs
[2024] 2 All
SA 113
(GJ) at paragraphs 85 and 86, in which a full court explored
the consequences of the decision in
Ashebo
and its impact on the lawfulness of detaining
asylum seekers who have not yet had a good cause interview.
28
In the cases of Mr. Shamore, Mr.
Mati and Mr. Rasool, no good cause interview had been arranged even
though the respondents had
every opportunity to do so. Once it had
been established that the delay in organising the interview in each
of the applicants’
cases was not reasonable, I was bound to
order the applicants’ release.
29
It was for these reasons that I made
my orders of 15 April 2024.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 2 May
2024.
HEARD
ON:
12 and 28 March 2024; 15 April 2024
DECIDED
ON:
15 April 2024
REASONS:
2 May 2024
For
the Applicant in case no.
P Maluleke
2024/021421
:
Instructed by Maladzhi & Sibuyi
For
the Applicant in case nos. I
Nwakodo
2024/025071
and
2024/025073:
Instructed by Tony Okorie Attorneys
For the
Respondents:
No appearance
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