Home Affairs faces court challenge over birth certificate backlog

The UCT Children’s Institute and parents took the Department of Home Affairs to the Western Cape High Court on 10 June 2026 seeking a plan to clear years of delays in late birth registrations.

On Wednesday the applicants argued before Judge Ncumisa Mayosi that systemic problems at Home Affairs have created a large backlog of undecided late registration of birth applications. They said years of waiting leave children without identity documents and block access to education, healthcare and social grants. Advocate Daniel Linde told the court the applicants are among the most vulnerable in society. The department responded that it has reduced undecided applications to 33,386 as of May 2025 and that the number will never reach zero under the law. The hearing also heard evidence of a fire at the Germiston office in August 2025 that destroyed paper files, forcing some families to restart the process. The Children’s Institute disputes the department’s backlog figures and seeks a court order for a transparent plan to resolve current and future applications.

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South African officials enforcing immigration at a border checkpoint with protesters in the background
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South Africa ramps up immigration enforcement amid protests

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The Inter-Ministerial Committee on Migration held a briefing on 14 June detailing enforcement actions following President Cyril Ramaphosa’s five-point plan on illegal immigration. Over 2,745 foreign nationals have been repatriated so far. The government warned against vigilantism as anti-migrant groups set a 30 June deadline for undocumented migrants to leave.

Huduma Kenya has blamed ongoing system challenges for delays in issuing identity cards. The agency advised applicants to visit centres for updates instead of checking online status.

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The Democratic Alliance lodged a formal complaint with the South African Human Rights Commission on 12 June 2026, citing systemic failures in reporting and prosecuting child sexual abuse cases that result in pregnancies among young girls.

A parliamentary ad hoc committee has concluded that witness testimony reveals a serious institutional crisis in South Africa’s law enforcement agencies. The findings follow months of hearings into allegations of drug cartel infiltration.

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On Monday prosecutors in the Western Cape High Court urged Judge Robert Henney to close Nafiz Modack’s defence case, citing repeated delays that they say amount to an abuse of process.

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