Rwandan hitman who had ‘change of heart’ can apply for asylum in SA

He was placed in a witness protection programme but did not apply for asylum.

Ruta was arrested in March 2016 for being in possession of a fraudulent asylum-seeker permit and for traffic violations. The department of home affairs sought to deport him to Rwanda, after he served his sentence for being in possession of the fake permit.

But Ruta believed that he should be given a chance to apply for asylum and the high court in Pretoria granted him this right. However, the Supreme Court of Appeal ruled in a 4-1 judgment that Ruta had contravened the Refugees Act by failing to apply for asylum timeously and without delay.

The question that the Constitutional Court had to deal with was whether a person who claimed to be a refugee and expressed an intention to apply for asylum should be permitted to apply under the Refugees Act or be dealt with as an illegal foreigner under the Immigration Act.

In this week’s unanimous judgment, judge Edwin Cameron said the Refugees Act was clear: delay in itself did not disqualify an asylum application.

Cameron said while the Immigration Act determined if an “illegal foreigner” was liable to deportation, the Refugees Act was the applicable law to determine who may seek asylum and who was entitled to refugee status.

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