NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

SA govt demands action against employers of illegal foreigners

- — The Citizen

SOUTH Africa’s Home Affairs minister Aaron Motsoaledi has called for harsher sanctions against business owners who knowingly employ undocument­ed foreigners.

Motsoaledi, along with Eastern Cape Premier Oscar Mabuyane, joined forces for a stakeholde­r engagement and service delivery monitoring session in Gqeberha.

This comes after the department dispatched mobile Home Affairs trucks to various communitie­s at the request of the provincial government, aiming to assist citizens in obtaining their documents.

Addressing the meeting, Motsoaledi advocated for sanctions against those who knowingly employ undocument­ed foreigners, suggested implementi­ng by-laws to prevent them from operating businesses, and also encouraged parents to register their children to prevent cases such as that of Thabo Bester.

“Anyone who knowingly employs an illegal foreigner or a foreigner in violation of this Act shall be guilty of an offence and liable, upon conviction, to a fine or imprisonme­nt not exceeding one year. Additional­ly, a second conviction of such an offence shall be punishable by imprisonme­nt not exceeding two years or a fine,” said Motsoaledi.

“A third subsequent conviction of such an offence shall result in imprisonme­nt not exceeding five years without the option of a fine.”

Motsoaledi also confirmed that the Department of Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs and the Department of Small Business Developmen­t were collaborat­ing to tighten laws to prevent undocument­ed foreigners from operating businesses in the country.

In response to community calls to shut down spaza shops owned by illegal foreigners amid rising cases of food poisoning among children, Motsoaledi and Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs minister Thembi Nkadimeng cohosted a workshop in October in Ekurhuleni.

Attendees included Human Settlement­s minister Mmamoloko Kubayi, Small Business Developmen­t minister Stella NdabeniAbr­ahams, the Department of Trade, Industry and Competitio­n, Salga, traditiona­l leaders and the Border Management Authority.

According to Home Affairs, stakeholde­rs agreed to immediate joint inspection­s of businesses by labour, health, trade, industry and competitio­n, and immigratio­n inspectora­te teams to enforce compliance with applicable laws.

Furthermor­e, they agreed to audit spaza shops in villages and townships and to establish mechanisms for registerin­g them with both traditiona­l leaders and municipali­ties.

There was also agreement on coordinati­ng and collaborat­ing on border law enforcemen­t between the government, traditiona­l and Khoi-San leaders, and the Border Management Authority, aiming to support traditiona­l authoritie­s in keeping records of foreign nationals in their communitie­s.

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