Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1319South Africa
Paul v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (2024/120786) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1319 (13 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 November 2024
Headnotes
in detention for longer than 30 calendar days without a warrant of a Court which, on good and reasonable grounds, may extend such detention for an adequate period not exceeding 90 calendar days, and
Judgment
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## Paul v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (2024/120786) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1319 (13 November 2024)
Paul v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (2024/120786) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1319 (13 November 2024)
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sino date 13 November 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2024/120786
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
In the matter between:
TEMBO
PAUL
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
THE DIRECTOR GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
THE CHAIRPERSON:
REFUGEE STATUS
DETERMINATION
OFFICER
Third Respondent
THE CHIEF DIRECTOR OF
DEPORTATION:
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Fourth Respondent
THE DEPARTMENT OF
JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Fifth Respondent
THE CHIEF MAGISTRATE:
KEMPTON
PARK MAGISTRATE’S COURT
Sixth Respondent
THE HEAD OF THE
NATIONAL
PROSECUTING
AUTHORITY
Seventh Respondent
THE CONTROL PUBLIC
PROSECUTOR:
KEMPTON
PARK MAGISTRATE’S COURT
Eighth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAHOSI J
Introduction
[1]
This is an urgent application for an order to,
inter
alia
,
interdict the respondents from deporting the applicant until his
status under the Refugees Act
[1]
has been lawfully and finally determined, declare his detention
unlawful, direct the respondents to release him from unlawful
detention and review and set aside any decision of a Magistrates’
Court to extend his warrant of detention.
The parties
[2]
The applicant is a Malawian national and an illegal “foreigner”
for the purpose of the Immigration Act.
[2]
He is currently detained at Kempton Park police station.
[3] The first
respondent is the Minister of Home Affairs, cited as an official
administrating the Refugees Act. The second
respondent is the
Director General of the Department of Home Affairs, also cited in her
official capacity. The third respondent
is the Chairperson, Refugee
Status Determination Officer, cited in his official capacity as an
official responsible for determining
asylum applications. The fourth
to eighth respondents are the Chief-Director of Deportation, the
Department of Justice and Correctional
Services, the Chief
Magistrate, Kempton Park Magistrate’s Court, the Head of the
National Prosecuting Authority and the Control
Public Prosecutor:
Kempton Park Magistrate’s Court. They are respectively cited in
their official capacities. The seventh
respondent opposed the
application.
Background facts
[4] The applicant
entered South Africa from Malawi in April 2024 through the Zimbabwe
and South Africa Border post in Musina,
Limpopo, where he enquired
about the process of applying for asylum and was advised to approach
the Refugee Centre, the Lawyers
for Human Rights and the United
National Refugee Commissioner offices, so he narrates. He claims to
have been forced to flee his
country because of socio-political
persecution and is in fear for his life.
[5] On 7 October
2024, the applicant was arrested and charged with contravention of
section 49(1)(a) of the Immigration Act.
He appeared before the
Kempton Park Magistrate’s Court on 9 October 2024 for a bail
application, which was opposed. The matter
was remanded to 23 October
2024 and transferred to Court C of the same Magistrate’s Court
for a guilty plea. On the return
date of 23 October 2024 and on the
behest of his attorneys of record, the matter was remanded to allow
the applicant to launch
this application. The return date was set for
1 November 2024. The first hurdle that the applicant faced was that
of urgency.
Urgency
[6] The applicant's
basis for urgency was that his application was inherently urgent, he
approached this Court at the earliest
opportunity available to him,
and cannot obtain relief in the ordinary course because there is an
imminent threat of deportation
to Malawi, where he will face the risk
of persecutions and threat to his life and freedom. He claims to be
exposed to the risk
of unlawful detention and subjected to the
ongoing violation of his rights to human dignity and freedom of
movement.
[7]
The respondent disputes urgency because the applicant failed to raise
his asylum status at
the time of his
arrest
or at his first appearance in the Magistrate’s Court. Instead,
he miraculously remembered that he intended to seek
asylum on 23
October 2024 during the last Court appearance, where the matter was
remanded for a guilty plea, and the impending
sentencing was
imminent. Had the applicant followed the correct procedure provided
for in the Refugees Act, he could have avoided
his arrest and
deportation, argued the respondent.
[8]
To the extent that the applicant claimed that the immense urgency
with which he brought this application revolved around
his continued
detention and the impending deportation, the respondent contended
that such urgency was ill-founded because there
was no impending
deportation as the matter in the Magistrate’s Court was still
pending and his detention was lawful. This
argument ignores the fact
that the applicant is in detention and awaiting imminent deportation
upon being convicted for breaching
the Immigration Act. Therefore,
his application is urgent.
[3]
Submission
[9] The applicant
submitted that his detention at the Kempton Park police station was
arbitrary and unlawful and subjected
him to an ongoing violation of
his rights to apply for asylum, human dignity and freedom of
movement. He asserted that, albeit
there was no conviction or date
for deportation set, he awaited to be transferred to the Lindelani
Deportation camp from where
he will be deported to a country from
which he fled. Under the circumstances, the applicant argued that his
deportation was imminent
and he faced a real risk of persecution and
threats to his life, physical safety and freedom.
[10] The respondent
conceded that the applicant had a right to be allowed to appear
before a Refugee Status Determination
Officer ("RDSO") for
the processes under section 21(1B) of the Refugee Act, read with
Regulation 8 (3), but denied that
his arrest and detention were
unlawful.
Legal Framework
Immigration Act
[11]
Section 23 deals with asylum transit visas, and it reads:
“
(1)
The Director-General may, subject to the prescribed procedure under
which an asylum transit visa may be granted, issue
an asylum transit
visa to a person who at a port of entry claims to be an asylum
seeker, valid for a period of five days only,
to travel to the
nearest Refugee Reception Office in order to apply for asylum.
(2)
Despite anything contained in any other law, when the visa
contemplated in subsection
(1)
expires before
the holder reports in person at a Refugee Reception Office in order
to apply for asylum in terms of
section
21 of
the Refugees
Act, the holder of that visa shall become an illegal foreigner and be
dealt with in accordance with this Act.”
[12] Section 34
provides for the deportation and detention of illegal foreigners as
follows:
“
(1)
Without the need for a warrant, an immigration officer may arrest an
illegal foreigner or cause him or her to be arrested,
and shall,
irrespective of whether such foreigner is arrested, deport him or her
or cause him or her to be deported and may, pending
his or her
deportation, detain him or her
or cause him or her to be detained in a manner and at a place
determined by the Director-General,
provided that the
foreigner concerned—
(a)
shall be notified in writing of the decision to deport him or her and
of his or her right to appeal such decision in terms
of this Act;
(b)
may at any time request any officer attending to him or her that his
or her detention for the purpose of deportation be
confirmed by
warrant of a Court, which, if not issued within 48 hours of such
request, shall cause the immediate release of such
foreigner;
(c)
shall be informed upon arrest or immediately thereafter of the rights
set out in the preceding two paragraphs, when possible,
practicable
and available in a language that he or she understands;
(d)
may not be held in detention for longer than 30 calendar days without
a warrant of a Court which, on good and reasonable
grounds, may
extend such detention for an adequate period not exceeding 90
calendar days, and
(e)
shall be held in detention in compliance with minimum prescribed
standards protecting his or her dignity and relevant
human rights.”
[13]
Section 49 reads:
“
(1)
(a) Anyone who enters or remains in, or departs from the
Republic in contravention of this Act, shall be guilty
of an offence
and liable on conviction to a fine or to imprisonment not exceeding
two years.
(b)
Any illegal foreigner who fails to depart when so ordered by the
Director-General shall be guilty of an offence and liable
on
conviction to a fine or to imprisonment not exceeding four years.’
Refugees
Act
[14]
Section 2 captures the fundamental principle of non-refoulement
[4]
and it states:
“
Notwithstanding
any provision of this Act or any other law to the contrary, no person
may be refused entry into the Republic, expelled,
extradited or
returned to any other country or be subject to any similar measure,
if as a result of such refusal, expulsion, extradition,
return or
other measure, such person is compelled to return to or remain in a
country where:
(a)
he or she may be subjected to persecution on account of his or her
race, religion, nationality, political opinion or
membership of a
particular social group; or
(b)
his or her life, physical safety or freedom would be threatened on
account of external aggression, occupation, foreign
domination or
other events seriously disturbing public order in any part or the
whole of that country.”
[15]
Section 4 provides for exclusion from refugee status as follows:
“
(1)
An asylum seeker does not qualify for refugee status for the purposes
of this Act if a Refugee Status Determination Officer has
reason to
believe that he or she:
(a)
has committed a crime against peace, a crime involving torture, as
defined in the Prevention and Combating of Torture of Persons
Act,
2013 (Act 13 of 2013), a war crime or a crime against humanity, as
defined in any international legal instrument dealing with
any such
crimes; or
(b)
has committed a crime outside the Republic, which is not of a
political nature and which, if committed in the Republic, would be
punishable by imprisonment without the option of a fine; or
(c)
has been guilty of acts contrary to the objects and principles of the
United Nations or the African Union; or
(d)
enjoys the protection of any other country in which he or she is a
recognised refugee, resident or citizen; or
(e)
has committed a crime in the Republic, which is listed in Schedule 2
of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1997 (Act 105 of 1997),
or which
is punishable by imprisonment without the option of a fine; or
(f)
has committed an offence in relation to the fraudulent possession,
acquisition or presentation of a South African identity card,
passport, travel document, temporary residence visa or permanent
residence permit; or
(g)
is a fugitive from justice in another country where the rule of law
is upheld by a recognised judiciary; or
(h)
having entered the Republic, other than through a port of entry
designated as such by the Minister in terms of section 9A of the
Immigration Act, fails to satisfy a Refugee Status Determination
Officer that there are compelling reasons for such entry; or
(i)
has failed to report to the Refugee Reception Office within five days
of entry into the Republic as contemplated in section 21,
in the
absence of compelling reasons, which may include hospitalisation,
institutionalisation or any other compelling reason: Provided
that
this provision shall not apply to a person who, while being in the
Republic on a valid visa, other than a visa issued in terms
of
section 23 of the Immigration Act, applies for asylum.
(2)
For the purposes of subsection (1) (c), no exercise of a human right
recognised under international law may be regarded as being
contrary
to the objects and principles of the United Nations or the African
Union.”
[16] Section 9
reads:
(1) Subject to this
Act, no person shall enter or depart from the Republic at a place
other than a port of entry.
(2)
Subject to this Act, a citizen shall be admitted, provided that he or
she identifies himself or herself as such and the
immigration officer
records his or her entrance.
(3)
No person shall enter or depart from the Republic—
(a)
unless he or she is in possession of a valid passport and, in the
case of a minor, has his or her own valid passport;
(b)
except at a port of entry, unless exempted in the prescribed manner
by the Minister, which exemption may be withdrawn
by the Minister;
(c)
unless the entry or departure is recorded by an immigration officer
in the prescribed manner; and
(d)
unless his or her relevant admission documents have been examined in
the prescribed manner and he or she has been interviewed
in the
prescribed manner by an immigration officer: Provided that, in the
case of a child, such examination and interview shall
be conducted in
the presence of the parent or relative or, if the minor is not
accompanied by the parent or relative, any person
of the same gender
as the minor.
(4)
A foreigner who is not the holder of a permanent residence permit
contemplated in section
25
may only enter
the Republic as contemplated in this section if—
(a)
his or her passport is valid for a prescribed period; and
(b)
issued with a valid visa, as set out in this Act.
[17]
Section 21 provides for the application for asylum. It reads:
“
(1)
(a)
Upon reporting to the Refugee
Reception Office within five days of entry into the Republic, an
asylum seeker must be assisted by
an officer designated to receive
asylum seekers.
(b)
An application for asylum must be made in person in accordance with
the prescribed procedures to a Refugee Status Determination
Officer
at any Refugee Reception Office or at any other place designated by
the Director General by notice in the
Gazette
.
(1A)
Prior to an application for asylum, every applicant must submit his
or her biometrics or other data, as prescribed,
to an immigration
officer at a designated port of entry or a Refugee Reception Office.
(1B)
An applicant who may not be in possession of an asylum transit visa
as contemplated in section 23 of the
Immigration Act, 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.
(1C)
The Director-General may, by notice in the
Gazette
,
require any category of asylum seekers to report to any particular or
designated Refugee Reception Office or other place specially
designated as such when lodging an application for asylum, if the
DirectorGeneral considers it necessary for the proper
administration
of this Act.
(1D)
For purposes of subsection (1C), a category of asylum seekers refers
to asylum seekers from a particular country of origin or geographic
area or of a particular gender, religion, nationality, political
opinion or social group.
(2)
The Refugee Status Determination Officer must, upon receipt of the
application contemplated in subsection (1), deal with such
application in terms of section 24.
(2A)
When making an application for asylum, every applicant must declare
all his or her spouses and dependants, whether in the Republic
or
elsewhere, in the application for asylum.
(3)
When making an application for asylum, every applicant, including his
or her spouse and dependants, must have his or her biometrics
taken
in the prescribed manner.
(4)
Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, no proceedings may be
instituted or continued against any person in respect of his or
her
unlawful entry into or presence within the Republic if:
(a)
such person has applied for asylum in terms of subsection (1), until
a decision has been made on the application and, where applicable,
such application has been reviewed in terms of section 24A or where
the applicant exercised his or her right to appeal in terms
of
section 24B; or
(b)
such person has been granted asylum.”
[18]
Section 22 is titled “Asylum seeker visa” and it reads:
“
(1)
An asylum seeker whose application in terms of section 21(1) has not
been adjudicated, is entitled to be issued with an asylum
seeker
visa, in the prescribed form, allowing the applicant to sojourn in
the Republic temporarily, subject to such conditions
as may be
imposed, which are not in conflict with the Constitution or
international law.”
Regulations
[19]
Regulation 7 reads:
“
Any
person who intends to apply for asylum must declare his or her
intention, while at a port of entry, before entering the Republic
and
provide his or her biometrics and other relevant data as required,
including―
(a) fingerprints;
(b) photograph;
(c) names and
surname;
(d) date of birth
and age;
(e) nationality or
origin; and
(f) habitual place
of residence prior to travelling to the Republic.
and must be issued with
an asylum transit visa contemplated in section 23 of the Immigration
Act.”
[20]
Regulation 8 provides for the manner in which the application for
asylum must be made. It reads:
“
(1)
An application for asylum in terms of section 21 of the Act must―
(a) be made in
person by the applicant upon reporting to a Refugee Reception Office
or on a date allocated to such a person
upon reporting to the Refugee
Reception Office;
(b) be made in a
form substantially corresponding with Form 2 (DHA-1590) contained in
the Annexure;
(c) be submitted
together with―
(i)
a valid asylum transit visa issued at a port of
entry in terms of section 23 of the Immigration Act, or under
permitted circumstances,
a valid visa issued in terms of the
Immigration Act;
(ii) proof of any
form of a valid identification document: Provided that if the
applicant does not have proof of a valid identification
document, a
declaration of identity must be made in writing before an immigration
officer; and
(iii) the
biometrics of the applicant, including any dependant.
(2) Any person who
submits a visa other than an asylum transit visa issued in terms of
section 23 of the immigration act must
provide proof of change of
circumstances in the period between the date of issue visa and the
date of application of asylum.
(3) Any person who,
upon application for asylum, fails at a Refugee Reception Office to
produce a valid visa issued in terms
of the Immigration Act must,
prior to being permitted to apply for asylum, show good cause for his
or her illegal entry or stay
in the Republic as contemplated in
Article 31(1) of the 1951 United Nations Convention Relating to the
Status of Refugees.
(4) A
judicial officer must require any foreigner appearing before the
Court, who indicates his or her intention to
apply for asylum, to
show good cause as contemplated in sub-regulation (3)."
Analysis
[21] The
applicant’s case rest of his submission that the moment he
expressed his intention to apply for asylum he fell
under the
protection of Refugees Act and International Conventions and as such
his further detention and threats of expulsion were
unlawful. The law
in this regard has become crystalized.
[22]
In
Ashebo
v Minister of Home Affairs and others
,
[5]
the Constitutional Court considered the issue of whether there was a
legal basis to detain an illegal foreigner whilst the process
under
section 21(1B) of the Refugee Act read with Regulation 8(3) was still
pending and said:
“
[47]
It must be observed, at the outset, that the fact that an illegal
foreigner is still entitled to apply for asylum does not negate
the
fact that he or she has contravened the Immigration Act by entering
and remaining in the country illegally. Where the detention
is solely
for the purpose of deportation then the detention is authorised by
section 34 of the Immigration Act. However, where
the detained person
has been charged with a criminal offence in terms of section 49(1),
the further detention may also be authorised
by the Criminal
Procedure Act.
[48]
It is important to note that the applicant was charged under section
49(1)(a) of the Immigration Act. Sections 34 and 49 both regulate
illegal entry and stay by non-South African citizens in the country.
However, each has a distinct purpose. Section 34 does not
create or
refer to any criminal offence. But section 49 does. Section 34 is
primarily intended for deporting illegal foreigners
and detaining
them for that purpose, whereas section 49 criminalises certain
conduct.”
[23] The Court
further stated that:
“
However, and
whether the detention was in terms of section 34 or pursuant to a
criminal charge in terms of section 49(1)(a), the
same question
arises – whether the applicant’s expression of an
intention to apply for asylum entitled him to be released
from such
detention. The answer must be no.”
[6]
[24]
Regarding the International Convention, the Court stated that
Article
31 of the Convention does not give illegal foreigners unrestricted
indemnity from penalties but requires them to present
themselves to
the authorities and to show good cause for their illegal entry or
presence without delay. In light of the above,
the respondent
correctly contended that
the relief sought by the
applicant, a declaration of his detention unlawful and directing the
respondents to release him from unlawful
detention, is gravely out of
this Court’s purview.
[25]
The applicant was arrested and charged with contravention of section
49(1)(a) of the Immigration Act. Thus, his arrest
and detention do
not violate the non-refoulement protection in section 2 of the
Refugees Act, and his expression of an intention
to apply for asylum
does not entitle him to be released from detention. First, he has to
show good cause for his illegal entry
and stay in this country, and
the respondent must assist him by facilitating an interview with
an
immigration officer to determine whether he has a valid reason for
not being in possession of an asylum transit visa. Should
he succeed,
and an application is lodged, he may be issued with an asylum seeker
visa that would enable him to sojourn in the Republic
temporarily,
subject to such conditions as may be imposed, which are not in
conflict with the Constitution or international law.
[26]
The respondent proposed an alternative remedy,
which was identified in the
Ashebo
decision. It reads:
“
[59]
…
The applicant is entitled to an opportunity to be
interviewed by an immigration officer to ascertain whether there are
valid reasons
why he is not in possession of an asylum transit visa.
And he must, prior to being permitted to apply for asylum, show good
cause
for his illegal entry and stay in the country, as contemplated
in the above provisions. Once he passes that hurdle and an
application
for asylum is lodged, the entitlements and protections
provided in sections 22 and 21(4) of the Refugees Act – being
issued
with an asylum seeker permit that will allow him to remain in
the country, without delay, and being shielded from proceedings in
respect of his unlawful entry into and presence in the country until
his application is finally determined – will be available
to
him.
[60]
Once the applicant has an asylum seeker visa issued in terms of
section 22, he would be entitled to remain
in this country
temporarily. His continued detention, to the extent that it rests
solely on section 34 of the Immigration Act,
would unquestionably
become unlawful, because he would no longer be an “illegal
foreigner” for purposes of the Immigration
Act. Merely
expressing an intention to seek asylum does not entitle the applicant
to release from detention. On the other hand,
however, the
respondents, particularly the first, second, fourth, and fifth are
obliged – regardless of the basis of his
detention – to
assist him to give effect to his intention to apply for asylum. At a
practical level, this simply means that
these respondents must
facilitate arrangements either to transport the applicant to a RRO
for his interview or to bring the relevant
immigration and refugee
officials to the correctional centre in which he is detained to
conduct the necessary processes, whichever
means is convenient. They
must further refrain from deporting him until his asylum application
is finalised.”
[27]
The above remedy
was
recently applied in the judgment in
D
S L and others v Minister of Home Affairs and others
,
[7]
where the Court gave the following order:
“
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The first, second, third and fourth respondents are directed, to the
extent necessary, to take all reasonable steps, within
60 days from
the date of this order, to afford the applicants an opportunity in
terms of
section 21(1B)
of the
Refugees Act 130 of 1998
, read with
regulation (8)(3) thereto, to show good cause, and to allow the whole
process of any review or appeal, in the event
where good cause is not
established, to unfold until it is finally determined.
3.The
first, second, third and fourth respondents are directed to approach
the Magistrates Court for the extension of time should
the review or
appeal process not be finalised within the 60-day period. This
request should be accompanied by a report directed
to the Magistrates
Court, setting out what steps have been taken and why the processes
have not been finalised within the 60-day
period.”
[28]
In the circumstances, there is no reason why this Court should not
adopt the remedies above. Accordingly, the following order is
granted:
Order
1. The rules
relating to forms, services and time periods as prescribed by the
Uniform rules of this Court are dispensed with
the matter heard as an
urgent application in terms of
rule 6(12).
1.25cm; margin-bottom: 0cm; line-height: 150%">
2. The application
to declare the applicant’s detention unlawful, direct the
respondents to release him from unlawful
detention and review any
decision of a Magistrates’ Court to extend his warrant of
detention is dismissed.
3. It is declared
that in terms of section 2 of the Refugees Act 130 of 1998 (Act), the
applicant may not be deported until
he has had an opportunity of
showing good cause as contemplated in section 21(1B) of the Refugees
Amendment Act 11 of 2017, read
with regulation 8(3) thereto, and, if
such good cause has been shown, until his application for asylum has
been finally determined
in terms of the Act.
4. The first,
second, fourth, fifth and seventh respondents are directed, to the
extent necessary, to take all reasonable
steps within 60 days from
the date of this order to give effect to paragraph 3 above.
5.
The first, second, fourth, fifth and seventh respondents are directed
to approach the Magistrates Court for the extension
of time should
the review or appeal process not be finalised within 60 days. This
request should be accompanied by a report directed
to the Magistrates
Court, setting out what steps have been taken and why the processes
have yet to be finalised within the 60-day
period.
D. Mahosi J
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Heard: 01 November 2024
Delivered: This judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties'
representatives through email. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be
13 November 2024.
Appearances
For the
applicant:
Advocate A. Mafanele
Instructed by:
Tandoh Desmond Attorneys
For the seventh
respondent: Advocate L. Msomi
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Johannesburg
[1]
Act
130 of 1998, as amended.
[2]
Act
13 of 2002, as amended.
[3]
See
Ashebo
v Minister of Home Affairs and others
[2023] ZACC 16
;
2024 (2) BCLR 217
(CC);
2023 (5) SA 382
(CC) at
[13]
.
[4]
See
Abore
v Minister of Home Affairs and Another
[2021] ZACC 50
;
2022 (4) BCLR 387
(CC);
2022 (2) SA 321
(CC) at
[42]
.
[5]
[2023]
ZACC 16; 2024 (2) BCLR 217 (CC); 2023 (5) SA 382 (CC).
[6]
Id at [50].
[7]
[2024]
ZAGPJHC 123 at [95].
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