The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Appeals by refugees cause backlog’

- Molefe Seeletsa

Home Affairs Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi has clarified that his department is battling a backlog in appeals for refugees and asylum-seekers.

“There’s a common believe that home affairs has got a backlog on the processing of all refugees and asylum-seekers in the country and that is not necessaril­y [true],” Motsoaledi told parliament’s portfolio committee on home affairs on Tuesday.

“We don’t have a backlog on people who are coming in for the first time to apply for asylum.”

Motsoaledi explained that the appeals process caused backlogs in the system. “The backlog is people who have been rejected and are on appeal. In other words, people who come here asking for asylum or refugee [status], they get processed and after processing whatever the [outcome] is, they start an appeal process, which I must state, is over-elaborate in our country,” he said.

“So for that reason there is a very big backlog on that because it is an unending appeal process.”

Motsoaledi said government was working on a plan with the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees on how to deal with the backlog.

The department operates five Refugee Reception Offices – which were closed for two years due to the Covid pandemic across five provinces, including the Cape Town centre which is awaiting the completion of a new office.

According to Refugee Appeals Authority of South Africa (Raasa), which is responsibl­e for adjudicati­ng asylum applicatio­ns on appeal, one of the contributo­rs to the backlog is the high inflow of economic migrants.

This is because current legislatio­n did not make provisions for economic migrants, thus, the appeals were stacking up.

Furthermor­e, Internatio­nal Treaties and Convention­s on asylum seekers and refugees does not have legislatio­n to deal with economic migrants either.

“As a result, everyone who’s a failed asylum seeker in South Africa goes through a process of appeal. So it is what we can call an unending bureaucrat­ic ladder,” said Raasa chair Zilpha Raphesu.

“Everyone who is an economic migrant, if you are rejected on the first leg, you proceed to the second leg, up until the last leg.”

About 133 582 asylum-seekers are still waiting the processing of their appeal applicatio­n as per the National Immigratio­n Informatio­n System.

Meanwhile, home affairs deputy director-general for immigratio­n services, Yusuf Simons, told the committee the department was embarking on strategies to recover full services in a manner that reduces the possibilit­y of overcrowdi­ng, given the backlog built over the past two years.

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