Foreign Nationals to Gain South African Citizenship Through Merit-Based System
iReport South Africa | 15.04.2026 16:04
South Africa’s Cabinet has endorsed a new White Paper that could fundamentally transform the country’s approach to citizenship and immigration, introducing for the first time a merit-based system driven by a points framework.
Leon Schreiber described the proposed changes as among the most significant updates to immigration policy in decades. The initiative seeks to replace outdated procedures with more transparent, efficient processes, addressing persistent delays in application processing.
Central to the plan is a points-based model that evaluates applicants according to objective factors like professional skills, potential economic impact, and verifiable qualifications. This represents a departure from previous practices that prioritised length of residence, shifting focus toward individuals who can actively support economic development.
The White Paper also recommends establishing a Citizenship Advisory Panel to review applications and provide guidance, as well as implementing fixed windows for naturalisation submissions. These measures aim to bring greater structure and consistency to the process.
It is important to note that current provisions securing citizenship for children born in South Africa to at least one citizen parent will remain unaffected.
At the same time, the reforms propose tighter asylum regulations. A notable element is the “First Safe Country Principle,” which would bar asylum claims from individuals who have already transited through or received protection in another safe nation—a move likely to influence both migration flows and the volume of asylum requests.
Officials state that the overall objective is to enhance border security while aligning immigration with national development priorities.
The proposals will now be submitted to Parliament for debate and legislative consideration. If passed, they could reshape the criteria for citizenship and redefine how South Africa manages immigration in the years ahead.
Helen Zille embarrassed herself in Dobsonville after she recorded blocking the street playing on water in a desperate attempt to get votes. The Democratic Alliance politician arrived in the Soweto township on Wednesday and positioned herself in a small inflatable boat in the middle of a flooded road. A local man pushed the vessel through the murky water while Zille sat inside wearing a blue shirt printed with her name. Onlookers gathered on the pavement and recorded the scene on their phones. Some laughed and shook their heads as the boat drifted past houses and shops. The video quickly spread online and drew sharp criticism from residents and political observers.
Zille claimed the stunt drew attention to years of neglected drainage in the area. Yet many in Dobsonville saw it differently. They described the action as tone-deaf theatre staged for cameras ahead of local elections. The township has complained about the same flooded streets for over five years. Water pools after every heavy rain because blocked drains and broken pipes remain unrepaired. Instead of sending a technical team or meeting quietly with officials, Zille chose a public spectacle that turned a serious service-delivery failure into viral entertainment.
Critics pointed out that the performance blocked traffic and forced pedestrians to navigate deeper water. One resident noted that a black man ended up doing the physical labour of pushing the boat while Zille posed for the lens. Others called the move a cheap vote-seeking tactic that mocked the daily hardships faced by people living there. Supporters of the opposition party defended the visit as necessary pressure on the ruling coalition in Johannesburg. They argued that only such visible protests force authorities to act. Within hours of the video circulating, municipal workers reportedly arrived to clear the drain.
The incident highlights growing frustration with politicians who treat communities as backdrops for campaigns. Residents want clean streets and working infrastructure, not staged boat rides. Zille’s attempt to highlight failure may have backfired by exposing her own disconnect from the realities of township life. The footage remains a stark reminder that desperate gestures rarely replace genuine governance.