In discussions about correctional services in South Africa, a certain number frequently comes up, and once you hear it, it is difficult to ignore. Twenty-seven thousand eight hundred and eighty. That is the number of foreign nationals incarcerated in South Africa at the moment. A few are given sentences. A lot of people are still awaiting their court date. They are all putting additional strain on a prison system that was already overburdened long before this became a topic of discussion in Parliament.
According to the Department of Correctional Services, there are 13,266 sentenced offenders and 14,614 detainees awaiting trial. These are not insignificant numbers. They collectively account for a sizable portion of the prison population, and the Correctional Services Portfolio Committee is obviously feeling the strain.
The Chairperson of the Committee, Kgomotso Ramolobeng, has been clear about what she believes should be done. She contends that bilateral agreements might enable foreign nationals serving sentences to complete their sentences in their home countries rather than in South African facilities. Her argument is pragmatic rather than punitive. She argues that there is no specific justification for someone who has been found guilty and sentenced to serve their time thousands of kilometers away from home, particularly when SADC member states could theoretically reintegrate their own citizens into their own systems.
Even though the legal framework isn’t yet complete, there’s a feeling that the political will is starting to develop around this concept. A framework that might permit precisely that type of repatriation was recently signed by South Africa and Botswana in a prisoner transfer agreement. It’s a step. It remains to be seen if it quietly stalls after the signing ceremony or if it becomes a model that other regional governments adopt.

Legislation that hasn’t kept up with the discussion is making things more difficult. Anyone imprisoned in a South African facility must stay there until their sentence is served, according to a bill that is currently in effect. The Botswana agreement and any subsequent agreements of a similar nature are more symbolic than practical until that is changed. Ramolobeng freely admitted this, and the discrepancy between the signed agreement and the legislation that permits it to function is almost annoying.
In particular, the awaiting trial figure merits a pause. There are over 14,000 people in South African cells who have not been found guilty of anything; some have been there for months or even longer. That relates to more than just immigration enforcement. It discusses court backlogs, the speed of the legal system, and whether there are resources available to handle these cases more quickly. Delays that start somewhere else ultimately have an impact on the prison system.
The majority of foreigners incarcerated in South Africa are from nearby nations like Zimbabwe, Mozambique, and Lesotho. It turns out that these are the same nations that Stats SA recently identified as the main origins of the 2.8 million tourists who entered South Africa in May alone. There’s an irony there, or at least a tension worth enduring. Every month, millions come and go lawfully. A smaller but noteworthy portion wind up in the system, and it is unsure of how best to handle them.
It is evident that there isn’t a single solution to this issue. It requires regional collaboration, legal reform, and a quicker justice system. South Africa appears to be waiting on all three simultaneously at the moment.

