ActionSA welcomes the Constitutional Court ruling affirming that individuals whose asylum applications have been lawfully denied cannot remain in South Africa indefinitely through repeated reapplications and the abuse of legal processes.
The judgment does not create a new legal principle but rather reaffirms a position that should never have been diluted through weak enforcement and administrative dysfunction.
As exposed by the Special Investigating Unit (SIU), South Africa’s asylum system has increasingly drifted into dysfunction, undermining both the integrity of our immigration framework and the protections owed to genuine refugees.
At its core, this ruling sends a clear message: a rejected asylum application cannot become a permanent mechanism to delay lawful immigration enforcement.
South Africa cannot sustain a system where rejected applicants remain in the country indefinitely, legal processes are repeatedly recycled to evade accountability, and enforcement is weak or inconsistent.
An asylum system that is not enforced is not compassionate; it is careless, compromised, and unfair to both South Africans and legitimate asylum seekers. The breakdown in South Africa’s immigration system is not due to a lack of laws, but rather a persistent failure to implement and enforce existing laws effectively.
South Africa’s asylum system must prioritise genuine refugee protection while preventing abuse by economic migrants exploiting loopholes in the system.
Years of weak enforcement, administrative dysfunction, and policy inconsistency have eroded public confidence in the immigration system and placed enormous strain on state capacity.
ActionSA therefore welcomes the Constitutional Court’s affirmation of the law. The responsibility now shifts squarely to the Department of Home Affairs and the broader government to enforce it consistently, lawfully, and without delay.
This ruling must now translate into measurable action. The Minister of Home Affairs must:
South Africans deserve an immigration system that is lawful, credible, and capable of distinguishing between those legitimately seeking refuge and those abusing legal processes to remain in the country unlawfully. This judgment provides government with legal clarity. There can now be no excuse for continued inaction.
ActionSA Welcomes ConCourt Ruling Affirming that Asylum is Not a Revolving Door
ActionSA welcomes the Constitutional Court ruling affirming that individuals whose asylum applications have been lawfully denied cannot remain in South Africa indefinitely through repeated reapplications and the abuse of legal processes.
The judgment does not create a new legal principle but rather reaffirms a position that should never have been diluted through weak enforcement and administrative dysfunction.
As exposed by the Special Investigating Unit (SIU), South Africa’s asylum system has increasingly drifted into dysfunction, undermining both the integrity of our immigration framework and the protections owed to genuine refugees.
At its core, this ruling sends a clear message: a rejected asylum application cannot become a permanent mechanism to delay lawful immigration enforcement.
South Africa cannot sustain a system where rejected applicants remain in the country indefinitely, legal processes are repeatedly recycled to evade accountability, and enforcement is weak or inconsistent.
An asylum system that is not enforced is not compassionate; it is careless, compromised, and unfair to both South Africans and legitimate asylum seekers. The breakdown in South Africa’s immigration system is not due to a lack of laws, but rather a persistent failure to implement and enforce existing laws effectively.
South Africa’s asylum system must prioritise genuine refugee protection while preventing abuse by economic migrants exploiting loopholes in the system.
Years of weak enforcement, administrative dysfunction, and policy inconsistency have eroded public confidence in the immigration system and placed enormous strain on state capacity.
ActionSA therefore welcomes the Constitutional Court’s affirmation of the law. The responsibility now shifts squarely to the Department of Home Affairs and the broader government to enforce it consistently, lawfully, and without delay.