The North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria ruled against the South African Department of Home Affairs, which had attempted to revoke a citizenship order granted to foreign national Mikhail Sakharov. The court found the department in contempt for failing to recognize Sakharov’s citizenship, register his birth, and issue him an ID document, despite his marriage to a South African citizen and meeting residency requirements. Sakharov had applied for citizenship by naturalization but faced repeated rejections from Home Affairs, which required verification of his permanent residence permit before processing his application. In 2024, the court declared him a South African citizen and ordered Home Affairs to act within 30 days. Nearly a year later, the department sought to rescind the order, citing delays in gathering information, but the court rejected this, calling the failure to comply 'wilful' and 'mala fide.' The judge ordered the minister and director-general of Home Affairs to face 90 days in prison if they fail to comply with the order within 15 days and mandated the department to cover legal costs.
Lecture du biais (Gauche): The article frames the case as a victory for individual rights and judicial oversight over bureaucratic inertia. It highlights the court's rejection of procedural justifications used by the Department of Home Affairs to deny citizenship, implying systemic issues in governance. While the subject is a
Pourquoi ces scores (Factualité 85 · Objectivité 78): Factuality is high as the article accurately reports the court's decision and provides details from court documents. Objectivity is slightly lower due to the emotionally charged language like 'court slams Home Affairs' which implies judgment rather than neutrality.

