Minister of Home Affairs Budget Speech & response by ANC, IFP, DA & ACDP

Briefing

10 Jul 2019

Minister of Home Affairs, Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, gave his budget vote speech on the 10th July 2019

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GF6b7XIQX-o

Honourable Chairperson
My colleague Deputy Minister of Home Affairs Honourable Njabulo Nzuza
Cabinet colleagues
Chairperson of Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs, Honourable Bongani Bongo
Honourable members of the Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs
The Chairperson of the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC), Mr Glenn Mashinini
The representative of the CEO of the Government Printing Works (GPW), Ms Michel Modise
Honourable members of the House
Distinguished guests
Ladies and Gentlemen
Fellow South Africans

Good afternoon to you all and thank you for being here

It is a great honour and privilege to present to this house the 2019/20 Home Affairs budget and in the process to outline our plans and priorities for the first year of the sixth democratic government.

Every human being found within the borders of the Republic of South Africa will at some time or another, need the services of Home Affairs Department, unless such an individual deliberately and for some sinister motive, decides to exist in contravention of the laws of the country.

Hence the Department of Home Affairs has two main arms that defines its functions.  The two arms could be described broadly as civic matters and immigration matters.

I have just realised that to many people, Home Affairs means immigration and immigration only.  This is very misleading and unfortunate. 

Actually honourable chairperson, the civic arm of Home Affairs is the biggest and the most active ever.  This is because for any individual to live a stable, productive, trouble free and beneficial life within the confines of the laws of the country, such an individual need the services of Home Affairs at least three times within their life- time.

Of course it will be at least four times within the lifetime of those who decide to get married.

Your first ever interaction with Home Affairs is when you arrive in this world through the Republic of South Africa.  Home Affairs must record your arrival and place you on the population register.  This is done by awarding you a birth certificate which acts as prove of your arrival.  This document will indicate who you are, when did you arrive, where in the country did you arrive and who gave birth to you.

 

On this document Home Affairs will also award you a number, denoted as your Identity which will represent you in all transactions and interactions with the state, the corporate world and fellow human beings until you depart this planet.

Your second interaction with Home Affairs is when you turn 16 and you have to take on identity document commonly known as the ID.

Your third interaction is when you get married. 

Your fourth and very last interaction is when you depart this planet for good Home Affairs has to record that you have departed and never  to come back.   Whoever is  your next of kin is even awarded a document detailing your departure.  This is called a death certificate. 

Because of our relationship with the rest of the world, some of us may need a fifth interaction with Home Affairs, This is when you are awarded a passport. 

I have deliberately detailed people’s interactions with Home Affairs for two reasons:

  • Firstly, to remind you what Home Affairs is mainly about
  • Secondly to warn you that this seemingly simple interactions with Home Affairs while necessary can sometimes turn into horror – absolute horror.

I am talking here of the type of horror that turns your life upside down.  It may bring your life to an absolute standstill or even force your life into a tailspin.

Today in this budget speech, I want us to travel together  on a journey to make sure that the 5 interactions of the people of this country with Home Affairs are as pleasant as they could.  We need to work together to eliminate all possibilities of unpleasantness.

It may be essential for me to outline some of the issues that may turn one’s life into a nightmare instead of a stable, pleasant and productive one.

  • Your identity might be wrongly recorded deliberately or by mistake but such that you become somebody else rather than who you are.
  • Somebody might steal your identity and practically steal your life by impersonating you through this identity documents. 
  • Somebody may steal your document and commit crime that will automatically implicate you. 
  • You may be married off to a total stranger you have never met before.

For those who never went through this experiences, it may be difficult for them to comprehend what I am trying to convey, but for those who went through this horrors, no explanation is necessary for them to understand me.

Today, I have brought 2 (two) South Africans into this house and I wish to introduce them to you. 

We have Ms Thami Swartbooi. (Please stand up madam for the house to see you.)  Thami took her ID in 1995 and lived a normal life like any one of us.  She stays in Vereeniging in Gauteng.  In 2004 things turned horrible for her.  Another woman, staying a thousand km away from her in Nelson Mandela Bay, stole her identity and resumed life as Thami Swartbooi.  This means that whatever this other woman did, was regarded by law as having been done by Thami, and I can assure you  she did a lot of bad things.

Even when this other woman got married, the law regarded Thami as the one who got married.  Thami received summonses for debts she knew nothing about.  Two kids which she never met before were registered as hers in legal documents.  She couldn’t get officially married because the law won’t allow anybody to marry twice except after a divorce or death.  She could not open accounts of her own because she was supposed to be already heavily indebted.  Her life went into a tailspin and virtually came to a halt.  She lived this horror for 14 years.

Fortunately we reached to Thami when her story was reported in the media and gave her back her identity and her normal life within 48 hours.  She is now living life as she should and a month ago,  I went to apologise to her on behalf of the state.  Today I am apologising to her once more in front of this august house as a sign that we will never allow this to happen to other women anymore.  We have asked her to become an ambassador of Home Affairs on identity fraud and fraudulent marriages.   We want her to work with to identify women who are already living in this situation so that we solve their problems and make sure that this never happens again.   As to the evil woman who did this to her we are on her trail and very soon she will be locked up.

 

FRAUDULENT MARRIAGES

Annually, the Department came across an average of 2000 fraudulent marriages,  From 1st April 2018 till to date, the Department came across 2132 fraudulent marriages.  Out of these 1160 were found to be indeed fake and were annulled by the Department.  But 646 were found to be legitimate and the Department refused to expunge such marriages from the register.  These are called marriages of Convenience.

There are people who marry each other for convenience.  This happens between a South African and a non-South African.  The South African is rewarded with huge sums of money and the non-South African gain easy citizenship through the marriage.

There is a mistaken believe that when transactions through such marriages have been completed, you just approach Home Affairs and demand that they expunge the marriage from records.

I wish to warn that Home Affairs cannot just expunge your marriage simply because you no longer want it.  If you marry legally but for wrong reasons, you can only cancel that marriage through normal divorce proceedings in a court of law. 

The marriages that are truly fraudulent like the 1160 which I have mentioned above happen in three ways which people must be aware of.

  • Fraud syndicates consisting of Home Affairs officials and other marriage officers outside Home Affairs
  • Employment agencies who ask you to hand over all your documentation with a promise of securing a job for you
  • When there is duplicated identity where somebody is impersonating you, like in this case of Thami

Of the original 2132 fraudulent marriages we are still left with 326 which are still investigating.

Our second guest is Ms Esther Sihlabela from Hazyview in Mpumalanga.  She has 4 (four) children.  But our records indicate that she has 7 children.  She doesn’t know the other 3 children but they appear on her records nevertheless.  What is more heart breaking is that her last born was born in March 1999, twenty (20) years ago. 

However, Home Affairs records show that she gave birth to a baby boy in December 1998 and so could not have given birth to another baby boy 3 months later.  Hence officials refused to register this last born child of hers. 

This boy could not have a birth certificate or an ID for the whole twenty years of his life.  He was state-less for 20 years and Ms Sihlabela and this particular son of hers lived this horror throughout this decades.   Even police could not help Ms Sihlabela and her son.  She on her own started doing her own investigations and eventually made a break through.  She found out who this three children appearing on her documents are – and they are not South Africans.  But one of them has literally replaced her own son for 20 years. 

It is only through cooperation of rogue

- Home Affairs officials that Ms Sihlabela could be placed in this situation.  Such a cooperation from Home Affairs officials can only be secured through a bribe.  We are busy following up to find out which scoundrel in the Home Affairs Department can do such an inhuman act just for money.

Two weeks ago, after hearing the story of Ms Thami Swartbooi and how we solved it, a Dr Colleague of mine phoned me about Ms Ester Sihlabela’s story.  I called her in and we solved her son’s birth certificate problem within 24 hours and his ID problem within 5 days.

I don’t wish any South African to go through the ordeal that this two women and their families went  through. 

On analysing these problems, the Department come to one conclusion.  If we deal with all matters of identification at birth these problems will be markedly reduced or even eliminated.

Hence honourable chair we are planning a project with the Minister of Health, Dr Zweli Mkhize, whereby no child would be allowed to leave a hospital without a birth certificate,  an unabridged one which reflects his / her I/D and his / her parents.  Please don’t ask me what we are going to do with the runaway fathers.  Those are not fathers,  They are just baby makers.  Out of the ± 4000 health facilities in the country, 1445 can deliver babies. 

Out of these, only 391 facilities have resources,  to issue birth certificate at birth.  We are going to eliminate this anomaly.

This will need human resources, appropriate internet connectivity and appropriate equipment.  The project we are planning is not just about recording nor a birth has taken place.  No, the project is about making sure that the baby leaves a hospital with a printed on the birth certificate.

According to our roll-out plan, by March 2021 we will have completed the connection of 251 health facilities which are responsible for 84% of the births.  By 2023, we will have completed the connection of all other facilities where birth is taking place.

When this is done, we will call upon all parents, Home Affairs officials, hospital authorities and other leaders never to allow any child in South Africa to leave a hospital without a printed authentic birth certificate.

When this happens, the Ms Swartbooi’s and Ms Sihlabela’s of this world and their children will cease to suffer horrors of their lives being put on hold.

Home Affairs is not going to rely only on issuing birth certificate of birth to discuss forgery and fraud.  No, we have already instituted other measures.  The major one is that every Home Affairs who has to issue an official document, be it birth certificate, ID, passport, marriage certificate or death certificates can only access our systems through their password and finger prints.  This is called BACM (Biometric Access Control Management System).  With this system no Home Affairs officials can ever claim that their password and fingerprint were fraudulently used to access the system in their absence.

Every Home Affairs official who is empowered to issue documents have their Biometrics registered for that purpose.  An ordinary person like myself cannot get into a Home Affairs system and issue any official document.

This precaution will make sure that if a problem arise in future, we will definitely, with absolute certainty, know which Home Affairs official issued such a document.

It means in case of Ms Sihlabela, we would have immediately known which Home Affairs official took a bribe.

 

SMART ID

Honourable Chairperson, because this issue of identity is so important to South   African’s but always spoilt by fraud, has upped its game to squeeze out fraud.  At the dawn of democracy, South Africans have been issued green bar-coded ID’s which unfortunately can be easily forged and defrauded by various means.

In 2013, the Department introduced a smart ID card which looks like a credit card.  I can assure you that forging or defrauding using a smart ID next to impossible.  Hence all South Africans need the smart ID.

When the Department started in 2013, it identified 38 million South Africans who must migrate to the smart ID.   Until now, 13 million smart ID’s have been issued and 25 million are still outstanding.  Added to that are children who turn 16 every year and qualify for ID’s.

There are 412 Home Affairs front officers in the country where you can receive Home Affairs officers.

Unfortunately issuing a smart  ID,  due to its level of sophistication, cannot be done in an ordinary office.  You need a specially, equipped office to issue a smart ID as matters stand now, only 193 of the 412 offices are equipped to issue smart ID.  Hence, we issue only 3 million per annum.  All the other remaining offices are still forced to issue the green bar-coded ID’s and this will continue until such time that they are well equipped.  In try to accelerate the issuing of smart ID’s, we will this financial year, start assessing  26 more offices around the country to see if they can be equipped with the smart card system.  When this happens it will increase the offices that are so equipped to 219.

Honourable Chairperson, banks in South Africa are eager to have all their clients caring the smart ID card, and not the green bar-coded ID.

This is because banks in South Africa lose up to R50 million annually to ID fraud.  They have discovered that if all their clients are having the smart ID, this fraud will no longer happen.

Hence, the banks have agreed to go on a PPP with us whereby all the clients of banks need not go to queue in Home Affairs offices when they want the smart ID.

They can apply to the bank on line and get to the bank to have their biometrics captured.  This information is relayed to Home Affairs which then print and issue the smart ID and sent it back to the bank where the client will easily collect it.

For now only 13 branches of banks in South Africa are providing this service.  There are 12 in Gauteng and only 1 in the whole of the Western Cape.  The other Provinces have none.  This financial year, we will add 25 other branches of banks throughout the country and from April next year, we will add another 70.

Today we have brought to Parliament trucks outside here to service you members by giving you the opportunity to apply for a smart ID or even a passport.  Our standard is that people should get their ID’s or passports within 13 working days.

But if honourable members make use of this service and apply today, like Thami we will give you your passport and ID within the next 48 hours.  This is possible because members of Parliament are a very small number in a small confined space.

For this particular service we will be able to issue an ordinary passport. For members of Parliament who wish to apply for an official passport, please go to 56 Barrack street here in Cape Town and apply there.   If you apply today we can still issue you your official passport in the next 48 hours.

Guests in the gallery can also make use of this service but unfortunately I advice you not to do it  because you won’t be here in the next 48 hours.  Better go to your bank and apply there online.  To help you out, here are the branches that can help you immediately:

  • ABSA Lifestyle – Centurion
  • FNB Lifestyle – Centurion
  • Standard Bank – Centurion
  • FNB The Grove – Pretoria East
  • Nedbank Acardia – Acardia, Pretoria
  • ABSA Towers – JHB CBD
  • Killarny Standard Bank – Killarny mall
  • Standard Bank – Simmons Street, JHB
  • Lakeview Nedbank – Roodepoort
  • Nedbank Rivonia – Rivonia
  • FNB Merchant – Sandton
  • Standard Bank – Canal walk, Cape Town

For those who stay in far forbidden places like some of us from Limpopo, sorry for now, no bank offers this service.   Wait for next list of banks which will be read to you before the end of the year.

Please remember that if you wish to migrate from your green bar-coded ID to the smart card as I think you should, you will be required to pay R140.00 but if you are over 60 years of age, or you have just turned 16 years and are taking an ID for the very first time in your life, it is free.  For anybody who loses their smart card and need a replacement, you will have to pay regardless of your age.

 

DIGITIZATION OF RECORDS

Prior to our modernisation programme, all applications for births , marriages, deaths  , IDs, passports etc. were lodged using paper-based application forms and this meant that those non-digitised documents must be physically stored and retrieved manually from time to time. 

We have started a huge task of digitizing 286 million records in order to make it easy for our back office staff to resolve cases referred to them for resolution by the front offices.

Currently our back office staff find themselves shuttling between Pretoria CBD, Pretoria North and Bojanala District in North West where our records are archived.  So far, 5,6 million of those records are now digital and the journey continues as we build a paperless department.   These records we are digitizing consist of birth certificates, ID’s, passports, marriages and death certificates stretching as far back as early 1900. It is very common for Home Affairs to receive applications for vault copies and unabridged documents from the 1940’s, 50’s and 60’s onwards sometimes even earlier than this years.  These vault copies are in paper form and the ink is fading off due to humidity and other environmental conditions.   Hence it is extremely important for the Department to digitize these records because is invaluable and irreplaceable record of identity for our nation.

 

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

While Home Affairs Department core mandate is issuing identification, we also contribute significantly to economic growth. 

We do this by making life easier for our sister Departments such as Tourism to boast their tourism figures.  Tourism will soar if we relax visa requirements for entry into South Africa.  We know that Tourism is very important for job creation.

Out of the 193 countries who are member states of the United Nations, the Department has granted visa – free status to 75 countries.  Of these 16 are in our  continent and are SADC members and 59 are from all over the world.

Today, we wish to announce an addition to our visa – free countries.

These are: 

  • Qatar
  • United Arab Emirates
  • New Zealand
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Cuba
  • Ghana
  • Sao Tome and Principe

We will immediately enter into discussions with them about how a  visa-free regime will work.  We still have some homework to do for 3 countries whose combined populations make up close to 30% of the world’s population i.e. China, India and Nigeria.

While we are busy tackling the matter of the three countries.   For now we shall this financial year, increase 2½ times the number of people who work for Home Affairs to process visas in both China and India.  We shall increase 2 times the number of people who process visas to our country in Nigeria.

 

E-VISA

In addition to these measures, the President has announced in the State of the Nation address in both February and June that we shall accelerate the implementation of e-visa system.

The e-visa system will advance deployment of immigration as a tool for economic development outlined in the National Development Plan

(NDP).  We will hence deliver on this effective visa regime for tourism and high skill immigration.  E-visa will make it easier for tourists to visit, and for companies to acquire employees with critical skills.  It will be an online application with a risk-based adjudication and issuance of your visa electronically as opposed to a hard copy.  On receiving the electronic message by email, you just continue straight to your airport and head on to South Africa.

We have already started testing this system at Lanseria airport.  It is being tested together with its attendant BMCs or Biometric Movement Control system.  This testing will end at the end of October and will then roll-out the whole system increamentatly.

 

 

IMMIGRATION

As I said earlier on, the second arm of Home Affairs is immigration.  The Deputy Minister will talk about immigration in this debate today.

 

BORDER MANAGEMENT AUTHORITY (BMA)

For now I wish to talk about the BMA (Border Management Authority). In the public domain debate has been raging for a long time about South Africa’s porous borders and fragmented border management approach.

The problem is not that people must not come to South Africa, but that whoever enters the country must be properly documented.  The porous borders make documentation extremely difficult.  The problem of porous borders does not only lead to the lack of documentation of people.  There are also a problem of trafficking of women and children across these porous borders.  There is also a problem of hard drugs being smuggled easily across our borders. 

There is also a problem of stolen goods, stolen cars and counterfeit goods and contraband. Passing smoothly across our borders.

In 2013, the Cabinet agreed on a Border Management Authority or the BMA.  At present the borders are managed by 7 different Departments and entities applying 58 different laws passed by Parliament. 

The Departments are:

  • Home Affairs
  • SAPS
  • SANDF
  • Agriculture, Land and Rural Development
  • Health
  • Environment and
  • Treasury or SARS

These Departments have seven different command structures with different laws, work ethics and different governance regimes.  Under the BMA, there will be one command structure, and one governance system.  The management of the borders  will become rational.  The BMA Bill has been passed in the National Assembly in 2017 and unfortunately got stuck in the NCOP.  Our immediate task is to go to the NCOP and unstuck it so that we can establish the authority.

Once the bill is passed, the BMA pilot projects will start and focus on OR Tambo International Airport, Cape Town Seaport, Oshoek land post between eswatini and South Africa as well as Lebombo land post between Mozambique and South Africa.

Honourable Chairperson, South Africa has 72 ports of entry through which people enter our country.  These consist of 53 land ports of entry, 11 airports and 8 sea ports.

South Africa has 17 land ports of entry with Botswana, 14 land ports of entry with Lesotho, 11 land ports of entry with eswatini, 7 with Namibia of with Mozambique and 1 with Zimbabwe. 

To improve efficiencies in the facilitation of human and goods movement, the Department has decided on One-Stop Border Posts.  This will start with 6 land border posts being revamped and redeveloped in a PPP which will enhance greater collaboration between government and the private sector in terms of infrastructure projects.

These six (6) will be:

  • Beitbridge (Bordering with Zimbabwe
  • Ficksburg (with Lesotho)
  • Kopfontein (with Botswana)
  • Lebombo (with Mozambique)
  • Oshoek (with eswatini)
  • Maseru (with Lesotho)

GOVERNMENT PRINTING WORKS (GPW)

South Africans are used to hearing horror stories about the failure of state owned enterprises or SOE’s.

I wish to point to this house that not all state entities must be painted with the same brush.  The Government Printing Works under the Department of Home Affairs is one of the state entities that are running very very well.  I can state without any fear of contradiction that the Government Printing Works is one of the shining stars of state-owned entities.

It has been self funding for the past 6 years and hence runs its affairs without any cent from the treasury.  On the contrary it actually send a lot of profit to the treasury.  It is responsible for printing government documents like Government Gazettes, brochures, Bills and Information documents.  But it also provides security printing such as exam papers and certificates.

Lastly, it is responsible for ultra security printing of ID’s, passports and high security certificates whose forging could be disastrous for the country.

On Wednesday last week, the GPW signed a 5 year agreement with the Department of Labour in the Government of Eswatini to print for it high security certificates.

Two weeks ago, I was in Namibia and we have started discussions about the possibility of providing printing services for the Department of Home Affairs there.

This financial year, the government printing works will easily pay its more than  500 employees, hire 105 extra employees, purchase R517 million rand worth of ultra modern printing equipment and after all these expenditures, it will still make profit of R153 million by the end of the financial year.

Honourable members, I wish to extend our invitation to the members of the Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs to come and visit the Government Printing Works to see what I am talking about.

Let me take this opportunity to thank my colleague Deputy Minister Njabulo Nzuza for the harmest of working relationship.  Warm words of gratitude to the Acting Director-General Thulani Mavuso, his management team and all staff at Home Affairs for striving for excellence. In the gallery we have offices managers of Randburg Mr Lekalakala and Pretoria office Mr Ntamela and they manage large volumes of our clientele with excellence. We also have Ms Mkhupheka from the Scottsburg office in KZN who received accolades last year for excellent service.

Thanks for the warm working relationship with members of the Portfolio Committee of Home Affairs whom we had the honour of meeting for the first time last week.

We drew valuable lessons from experiences of innovators, African countries, International Development Agencies, UN Agencies and Private sector companies at the 2019 ID4 Africa Annual meeting held at Emperors Palace on the 18-20 June 2019.  A major highlight were case-studies on world class digital identity for improved public services.

Building collectively, a world class Home Affairs will indeed advance the goal of growing South Africa together – a South Africa of Justice, equity and prosperity for all.

I take this opportunity to tabling for the consideration of this house, the 2019/20 budget of R8,3 billion

I thank you!!!

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Deputy Minister Njabulo Bheka: Home Affairs Dept Budget Vote 2019/20

10 Jul 2019

Speech delivered by the Deputy Minister of Home Affairs Hon. Njabulo Bheka Nzuza on the occasion of the Home Affairs Budget Vote

Thank You Chair
The Minister of Home Affairs Dr. Aaron Motsoaledi
The Chair of the Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs Hon Advocate Bongo
The Whip of the Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs Hon Mosa Chabane
Members of the portfolio Committee
Distinguished Guests

We are called to serve. We are called to do all in our power and capabilities to serve the people. The people come first. They are the reason we exist as a department, we are not doing a favor for the people, we are offering a service that they deserve which is protected by the Constitution.

The services we offer our people are the sole responsibility of Home Affairs and as such this responsibility requires us to be at our best at all time. We have no option but to be the best because; It is only Home Affairs that can affirm or grant citizenship to foreign nationals. We are the only ones who can grant non-South Africans authority to enter or leave South Africa.  We are the only ones who can allow non-South Africans access to work, study or to do business in South Africa through our Visa regime. It is only Home Affairs that can grant asylum seekers a refugee status in the republic. It is only Home Affairs that can designate a port of entry to facilitate movement of people and goods in and out of the country, opening a gateway to international trade.

These are tasks we must execute with high level of consciousness that a compromised immigration system results in a compromised country. Our immigration system has a direct impact on our national security and the economy. Chairperson, we have a huge responsibility in our shoulders to maintain a world class immigration system. This is in line with the theme of this budget vote which is building a “World Class Home Affairs”. If we are to do this, we must learn to convert themes into actions and dreams into reality.

And to do this we must be frank and open. If we want a world class Home Affairs with world class immigration systems, we must be comfortable to discuss discomforting issues. The Greek Mathematician Archimedes teaches us that “The shortest distance between two points is a straight line”. To solve our problems, we must be upfront, frank and direct.

South Africa is today a great place to live in and many people in the world aspire to live, work and to be South Africans. We have developed laws that are humane, business friendly and go beyond just conforming to international standards on immigration.  We do not run refugee camps but we allow integration of refugees to local communities. We give refugees the same rights as citizens except for the right to vote. They have access to our social services such as basic health and social grants.

SADC countries do not require a VISA but only a passport to visit South Africa. We do not deny foreign nationals to work, study and to do business in South Africa provided they comply with the Immigration Act and related legislation. The white paper on international migration of 2017 contends that “International migration in general is beneficial if it is managed in a way that it is efficient, secure and respectful of human rights. In general nations flourish where people with different origins, skills, resources and cultures are able to live work and trade peacefully”.

Despite these open and friendly channels of migration we still have those who enter our country illegally undermining the sovereignty of our country. The issue of illegal immigrants is not supposed to be a difficult issue because those who seeks to come to South Africa must do so incompliance with the laws of our country. In the operation conducted in Marian Hill and Tongaat Toll Plaza between the 1st and the 7th of July 2019 we arrested 39 Foreign Nationals who were driving trucks without permits and legal status to be in the country. One employer has already been charged and more arrests are imminent.

We will curb the appetite of employers to employ undocumented foreign nationals all in the name of profits. They must know that when they break the law and employ illegal immigrants they will face the consequences and our inspectorate unit will leave no stone unturned. The major reason why they do this is because the seek to maximize their profits by abusing foreign nationals by paying them below market value salaries because they know they are in the country illegally. This can no longer be allowed to continue. We will fight the corruption that allows people and goods to enter the country illegally.

We have a serious responsibility to capacitate our inspectorate and allocate the necessary funding in order to enforce immigration laws that decisively deal with illegal immigration and its impact on our economy, social security spend and national security. We are moving forward with the One Stop Border Post project. This will be implemented in the 6 priority land ports between South Africa, Lesotho, Swaziland, Mozambique Zimbabwe and Botswana. These will promote intra-regional trade between our countries and reduce elicit trade as well as illegal movement of people within our borders. The OSBP project will also reduce congestion, and improve turnaround times in our ports of entry. This project is in line with our plan to build a world class home affairs.

This supports the National Development Plan to adopt a more open approach to immigration in order to expand the supply of high skills in a manner that contributes to economic growth. The policy objective of the one-stop shop posts will increase South Africa’s international competitiveness for critical skills and investment. In terms of the management of ties with South African expatriates, the one-stop border Post (OSBP) project objective is to proactively manage and harness emigration for development purposes; it will further ease cross-border movement, enabling African citizens, and provide a legal permitting route for SADC economic migrants.

We will also place our efforts towards improving efficiency in our refugee reception centers. We have to speedily conclude the adjudication process of asylum seekers who seek refugee status. We are located in 30 missions abroad where we process visa applications and offer civil applications for South Africans living abroad.  We are now moving towards a new era that will bolster economic growth and create jobs for our country. We are moving forwards with the implementation of the e-Visa Regime. This regime will place technology at the center of our operations by making it easy yet secure to enter South Africa.

The e-Visa regime will see tourists and visitors to South African applying for their visas online and these will be sent to a central adjudication and approval whilst our visitors sit at the comfort of their own home. The e-Visa regime will result in the issuing of virtual visas. This paperless virtual visa will combat visa fraud.  This will open South Africa as a desirable destination through the ease of our visa systems. The e-Visa regime will have huge tourism growth implications for the country. The e-Visa regime is anticipated to go on full production in November 2019.

The department currently runs an Advanced Passenger Processing System. This allows us to see and target undesirable visitors before they even board a flight from their destination. This gives us capacity to stop undesirable visitors for purposes of national security.  We are now going further by establishing the National Targeting Centre that will do risk assessments on visitors after they have boarded flights as a secondary control system. This is critical to ensure that undesirable and risky visitors are kept at bay, to create a secure environment for the country. 

World systems will work with world class infrastructure like the e-gates. The National Targeting Centre will be used to profile trusted travelers. These travelers will then be registered in our e-gates systems which will open for them automatically as they present themselves at our air ports of entry. These are world class systems that are linked with international policing and security.

We are building a modern home affairs. We are moving forward with our e-gates system in partnership with ACSA. This system will work by registering individuals as trusted travelers. Thus South Africans who are bona fide citizens who are not flagged on the stop risk engines will now be part of our trusted travelers which will drastically ease traffic for citizens giving us more capacity to speedily handle visitors.

The trusted traveler’s security vetted by our systems will be able to check themselves in and out of the country using e-gates which will register them on arrival and departure. This is in line with world standards. As a result of this technology, our airports will now rank higher within the international community making it a desirable destination for doing business.

Chairperson we are Building a World Class Home Affairs with World Class Immigration Systems. We will never fail.

Thank You