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Deportations Surge by 46% Over Two Financial Years in South Africa

Pretoria: The Department of Home Affairs has carried out a total of 109,344 deportations over the past two financial years, reflecting a sharp increase in enforcement.

According to South African Government News Agency, the increase highlights intensified law enforcement efforts against immigration violations, underscoring the department's commitment, alongside its partners, to restoring the rule of law. In the first year of the current administration, deportations rose by 30% - from 39,672 in 2023/24 to 51,560 in 2024/25. This was followed by a further 12% increase to 57,784 in 2025/26. Cumulatively, deportations over the two financial years rose by 46%, reaching 109,344 by 31 March 2026.

"Through ongoing campaigns like Operation New Broom, as well as the increasing use of biometric verification tools, we have already increased deportations by 46%," Home Affairs Minister, Dr. Leon Schreiber, said on Thursday in a statement. He urged individuals who are in the country illegally to self-deport before being apprehended, warning that deportation could result in being barred from re-entering South Africa legally.

"While enforcement efforts are clearly yielding fruit and scaling up every year, we remain equally focused on deterrence and modernisation. The deployment of drone and body camera technology has already made a difference, while the impending scale-up of the Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) system will record biometrics for every foreigner who enters our country, dramatically enhancing our ability to detect and arrest anyone who is in South Africa illegally," the Minister said.