The Department of Home Affairs has spent almost half a billion on litigation in the past 5 years
21 April 2024
The Department of Home Affairs (DHA) has spent a mammoth four hundred and twelve million rand (R412 951 709,88) of taxpayer's money on litigation in the past 5 years, almost half a billion rand in litigation. The price tag on the Department's frivolous litigation was revealed in a recent parliamentary question posed to the Minister of Home Affairs by the DA.
The amount spent on litigation ballooned since 2018/19. In the 2018/19 financial year, the litigation cost was around R7 million. In 2023/24 this amount escalated to R117 million, a 1 496% increase. Worryingly, in the latest 2023/24 year, the DHA spent more than double on private law firms instead of using the state attorney.
A leaked memorandum sent by the state attorney to the DHA was scathing of the inundation of lawsuits against the DHA because of its dysfunctional practices. There is also an emergence of a practice within the DHA to defend litigation which has no defence, as opposed to just following the court's instruction.
This is not the only practice which leads to the wasted expenditure. The Department is notorious for ignoring court orders, as was recently seen in the Lawyers for Human Rights case where the Department failed to introduce the necessary legislation, resulting in further litigation fees to deal with their 5-year delay.