South Africa Revokes Palestinian Visa Waiver, Citing Israeli ‘Emigration’ Efforts

President Ramaphosa ordered an inquiry, hinting the “mysterious” aircraft passengers had been “flushed out” of Gaza by Israel. “These are residents of Gaza who, in a rather mysterious way, were put on a plane that transited through Nairobi and then landed here,” he said.

Written by

Published on

South Africa on Dec. 7 revoked visa-free entry for Palestinian passport holders, following an investigation into a chartered flight that brought dozens of people from Gaza into the country without the required documentation last month. The Department of Home Affairs (DHA) said its probe confirmed “deliberate and ongoing abuse of the 90-day visa exemption for Palestinian ordinary passport holders by Israeli actors linked to ‘voluntary emigration’ efforts for residents of the Gaza Strip.”

The controversy erupted in mid-November when 153 Palestinians – men, women, and children – arrived in Johannesburg on a flight from Nairobi. They were held onboard for more than 12 hours because their passports lacked Israeli exit stamps.

President Ramaphosa ordered an inquiry, hinting the “mysterious” aircraft passengers had been “flushed out” of Gaza by Israel. “These are residents of Gaza who, in a rather mysterious way, were put on a plane that transited through Nairobi and then landed here,” he said.

The DHA later authorised the group’s entry after the humanitarian organisation Gift of the Givers guaranteed support for the travellers.

PerDHA, investigations into two separate flights carrying Palestinians revealed “systematic abuse” of South Africa’s short-stay visa exemptions, with the travel arrangements “designed… to relocate Palestinians from Gaza.” The second flight the DHA reported was an earlier arrival on Oct. 28.