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Court tells SA Government to reconsider decision to send back Zimbabweans

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A South African court ordered the government to reconsider its decision to terminate the special permits allowing nearly 200,000 Zimbabwe nationals to live and work in the country

A South African court ordered the government to reconsider its decision to terminate the special permits allowing nearly 200,000 Zimbabwe nationals to live and work in the country. The earlier decision of the South African government forced the Zimbabweans working in South Africa to return home if they didn’t obtain regular work visas, notwithstanding they have children who were born in South Africa and are South African citizens.

In its ruling, the Gauteng High Court in Pretoria said the Department of Home Affairs’ decision in 2022 to end the special exemption for citizens from neighboring Zimbabwe was unlawful and unconstitutional because it didn’t follow a fair process of consultation. The permits were extended until at least June 28 next year under the court ruling.

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The department initially set a deadline of June 30 this year — Friday — for the termination of the Zimbabwe Exemption Permit system. That deadline was recently extended to the end of the year. Around 178,000 Zimbabwe nationals live in South Africa under the scheme. It was introduced in 2010 in an attempt to deal with a surge in migration by Zimbabweans escaping the economic woes of their home country, which have persisted. The Helen Suzman Foundation NGO and a group advocating for the rights of migrants in South Africa took the government’s Department of Home Affairs to court over its decision.