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Civic services

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Government and communication

Civic services

Introduction

The Department of Home Affairs provides individual status-determination services. The department has a network of offices in all provinces. Mobile offices or units service areas on a regular pre-arranged basis where the establishment of fixed offices is not warranted. The department is divided into five functionalsupport and two line-function divisions. Statutory bodies falling under the department are the:

The Government Printing Works (GPW), a division of the Department of Home Affairs, provides printing, stationery and related services to all government departments, provincial governments and municipalities.

It also publishes, markets and distributes government publications. Based in Pretoria, the printing works provides a variety of related services to departments, the printing industry and other African countries, including manufacturing and supplying fingerprint ink to the South African Police Service (SAPS), and printing postage stamps for the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Lesotho.

In 2006/07, government allocated R212 000 to the GPW, which has extended its services tthroughout the region and continent. Early in 2007, the GPW won the contract to provide the African Union (AU) with diplomatic and service passports, which were delivered on Africa Day on 25 May 2007. In May, the GPW also printed examination papers for Malawi.

The GPW was expected to establish a forensiclaboratory capability to analyse passports, identity documents (IDs), visa labels or any other highsecurity face-value documents to complement other law-enforcement agencies in the fight against identity fraud.

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Civic services

The Branch: Civic Services is mainly responsible for population registration and civic services. Population registration entails recording personal particulars in the Population Register with a view to issuing IDs; identification by means of fingerprints
and photographs; and dealing with matters pertaining to the status of persons, such as births, marriages and deaths.

Civic services entail issuing passports, registering foreign births, determining citizenship, and issuing certificates of naturalisation or resumption of South African citizenship.

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Citizenship matters

South African citizenship is regulated by the South African Citizenship Act, 1995 [PDF] (Act 88 of 1995), and regulations issued in terms thereof. South African citizenship may be granted by way of:

  • birth or descent
  • an application for naturalisation as a South African citizen
  • an application for resumption of South African citizenship
  • the registration of the birth of children born outside South Africa to South African fathers or mothers
  • an application for exemption in terms of Section 26(4) of the Act.

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Population Register

The current Population Register hosted by the Department of Home Affairs stores and provides citizenry-identification information, including unique identification numbers, addresses, birth dates and marriage status. Information on this system is used for various purposes, including identity validation. In essence, this system forms the core of citizenry-information systems within the department.

Evolving technology, modern government structures and the need for more secure systems led to the department embarking on a programme to re-engineer the Population Register. This will align its function with the current government dispensation and future needs of both the Government and third-party institutions. This project is closely aligned with the implementation of the Home Affairs National Identification System (Hanis), which was approved by government in January 1996.

The focus of the project is on providing a more scalable, adaptable, efficient, secure and interoperable database. Features will allow integration with the automated biometric fingerprint system, information sourcing from the electronic document-management system, an electronic web-based query system, and interrogation from the different deconsole units.

By June 2007, the Hanis disaster-recovery site had been fully implemented.

Some R207 million was spent to create the disaster-recovery system at a secure location, which backs up all home affairs records every 15 minutes on a continual basis.

By June 2007, the digitisation of about 29 million sets of fingerprints had been completed, which were backed up as an essential part of the Hanis. Progress is also being made in digitally capturing the birth, marriage and death records of citizens under the Electronic Data-Management System, through which a total of 57 million records had been scanned. A further R167 million will be spent on expanding this project.

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Immigration

Immigration The Branch: Immigration is responsible for control over the admission of foreigners for residence in and departure from South Africa. This entails:

  • processing applications for visas, temporary residence permits and immigration permits
  • maintaining a travellers’ and foreigners’ control system
  • tracing and removing foreigners who are considered undesirable or who are in South Africa illegally.

The Refugees Act, 1998 [PDF] (Act 130 of 1998), gives effect within South Africa to the relevant international legal instruments, principles and standards relating to refugees; provides for the reception into South Africa of asylum seekers; regulates applications for and recognition of refugee status; and provides for the rights and obligations flowing from such status, and related matters. The Act came into effect on 1 April 2000.

In recent years, the department has sought to control illegal immigration through a variety of measures:

The final immigration regulations came into effect on 1 July 2004. The release of these regulations followed the signing of the Immigration Amendment Act, 2004 [PDF] (Act 19 of 2004), into law on 12 October 2004.

The immigration policy aims to:

  • discourage illegal migration into South Africa by encouraging foreign nationals to apply for different permits to legalise their stay in the country
  • create an enabling environment for foreign direct investment in South Africa
  • attract scarce skills required by the economy in accordance with the 2014 vision of eradicating poverty and underdevelopment.

The final immigration regulations furthermore aim to establish a new system of immigration control to
ensure that:

  • temporary and permanent residence permits are issued as expeditiously as possible and according to simplified procedures
  • security considerations are fully satisfied and the State regains control over the immigration of foreigners to South Africa
  • economic growth is promoted through the employment of needed foreign labour, foreign investment is facilitated, the entry of exceptionally skilled or qualified people is enabled, skilled HR are increased, and academic exchange programmes in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) are facilitated
  • tourism is promoted
  • the contribution of foreigners to the South African labour market does not adversely affect existing labour standards and the rights and expectations of South African workers
  • a policy connection is maintained between foreigners working in South Africa and the training of South African citizens
  • a human rights-based culture of enforcement is promoted.

The Directorate: Refugee Affairs manages refugee services in South Africa. It has established the Asylum Seekers Unit and Country of Origin Information Unit.

These units advise refugee-reception offices on policy-related matters and on the background information of an applicant’s country of origin. After being recognised, refugees are issued with refugee IDs, which give them access to the basic services in South Africa, including basic healthcare, education and employment.

The South African Government, through the Department of Home Affairs, issues UN travel documents to refugees. Since May 2005, refugees have been issued with a refugee smart ID, which contains security features that are not forgeable.

This directorate seeks to professionalise the functioning of the refugee regime in preparation for mass influxes in the future, the main focus as a measurement point being the 2010 Soccer World Cup. The department also seeks to assist those who wish to return to their countries of origin after changes in the circumstances that led to their forced migration, by engaging in campaigns of voluntary repatriation jointly with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, and later declaration and application of cessation clauses, e.g. the Angolan Repatriation Programme.

The Directorate: Information Co-ordination manages information on the National Immigration Branch to facilitate regional and national operations.

The directorate’s main objectives are to:

  • establish an information repository, which acts on risks and urgent immigration matters
  • ensure dynamic real-time support on tactical and legal matters to immigration officers globally.

By mid-2007, a turnaround project for immigration control was being implemented. It includes:

  • establishing an integrated refugee-information system
  • developing a draft protocol on the smuggling of human beings
  • ratifying an SADC protocol on free movement of people
  • developing a new secure passport system
  • capacitating the Department of Home Affairs’ immigration branch, as part of the department’s turnaround strategy.

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Visas

Foreigners who wish to enter South Africa must be in possession of valid and acceptable travel documents. They must have valid visas, except in the case of certain countries whose citizens are exempt from visa control. Such exemptions are normally limited to permits, which are issued for 90 days or less at the ports of entry. The visa system is aimed at facilitating the admission of acceptable foreigners at ports of entry. The visa becomes a permit upon entry, therefore no additional permit will be issued.

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Control of travellers

The travel documents of persons entering or departing South Africa are examined by immigration officers at recognised ports of entry, to determine whether such persons comply with the requirements.

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Control of sojourn

Foreigners who are in the country illegally and who are therefore guilty of an offence may be classified into three categories, namely those who:

  • entered the country clandestinely
  • failed to renew the temporary residence permits issued to them at ports of entry
  • breached the conditions of their temporary residence permits without permission, e.g. holiday visitors who took up employment or started their own businesses.

Depending on the circumstances, persons who are in South Africa illegally are either prosecuted, removed, or their sojourn is legalised. Officers at the various regional and district offices of the department are in charge of tracing, prosecuting and removing illegal foreigners from the country. Employers of illegal foreigners may also be prosecuted.

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Permanent residence

Government allows immigration on a selective basis. The Department of Home Affairs is responsible for:

  • Processing applications for immigration permits for consideration.
  • Admitting persons suitable for immigration, such as skilled workers in occupations in which there is a shortage in South Africa. The department particularly encourages applications by industrialists and other entrepreneurs who wish to relocate their existing concerns or to establish new concerns in South Africa.

The department is not directly involved in an active immigration drive. In categories where shortages exist, the normal procedure is for employers to recruit abroad independently, and in most cases, initially apply for temporary work permits.

The department considers the applications for immigration permits of prospective immigrants who wish to settle in the relevant provinces. In terms of new regulations, regions will be responsible for issuing permits previously issued by the regional committees in respect of permanent residence. They will also do so in respect of temporary residence. Enquiries in this regard may be made to the nearest office of the Department of Home Affairs in South Africa, to missions abroad, or to the Director-General of Home Affairs for the attention of the Directorate: Permitting in Pretoria.

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Temporary residence

In terms of the Immigration Act, 2002, temporary residence permits are divided into the following categories:

  • visitor’s permits
  • diplomatic permits
  • study permits
  • treaty permits
  • business permits
  • crew permits
  • medical permits
  • relative’s permits
  • work permits with the following categories:
    • quota work permits
    • general work permits
    • intra-company transfer work permits
    • exceptional skills work permits
    • corporate work permits
    • retired person permits
    • exchange permits
  • asylum permits.

In terms of Section 11, a visitor’s permit may be issued to a person who intends to enter South Africa for less than 90 days for the purpose of tourism, business, education or medical treatment.

Foreigners who are exempt from visa requirements, or who are citizens of countries that are exempt from visa requirements for 90 days, may therefore proceed to a port of entry where visitors’ permits for the mentioned period will be issued, provided such persons can produce evidence to prove their bona fides.

Foreigners who are citizens of countries that are exempted from visa requirements for less than 90 days may likewise obtain visitors’ permits at a port of entry. Such foreigners enjoy exemption for the period only. Foreigners who require a visa prior to proceeding to South Africa, or who intend to enter South Africa for any period longer than the period for which they are exempt from the visa requirement, must apply for and obtain a visa prior to proceeding to the country.

Foreigners who intend to accept an offer of employment, start a business, take up studies or enter South Africa for any purpose for which a temporary residence permit is provided for in the Act, must apply for an appropriate temporary residence permit via the South African diplomatic representative in their countries of origin/ residence. In countries where there are no representatives, applications must be submitted in the nearest country where there is a foreign representative.

The outcome must be awaited outside South Africa and applicants may only proceed to South Africa once the permit as applied for has been issued to them.

The overriding consideration when dealing with applications for work permits is whether the employment or task to be undertaken cannot be performed by a South African citizen or an approved permanent immigrant already residing in South Africa.

Applications for the extension of temporary residence permits must be submitted at least 30 days prior to the expiry date of the permit, to the nearest regional/district office of the Department of Home Affairs where the applicant is employed. Any enquiries related to temporary residence permits may be directed to the nearest district/regional office of the Department of Home Affairs in South Africa, to South African diplomatic representatives abroad, or to the Director-General of Home Affairs, for the attention of the Directorate: Permitting.

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Removal of undesirable persons

In terms of legislation, the Minister of Home Affairs may order the deportation of any person who is declared undesirable or prohibited, other than an asylum seeker.

These are foreign nationals who are in South Africa illegally and should be deported to the countries of which they are citizens or territories where they have rights of domicile or residence.

Any person who has become a deportation subject may, pending his or her deportation, be detained in a manner and at a place determined by the Director- General of the Department of Home Affairs.

Source: South Africa Yearbook 2007/08
Editor: D Burger. Government Communication and Information System

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Last modified: 24 April 2008 08:46:02.

 
 

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