South Africa's Cabinet approved the Revised White Paper on Citizenship, Immigration and Refugee Protection on Friday 3 April 2026, presented by Minister of Home Affairs Leon Schreiber 1. The paper introduces a points-based migration system, names new visa categories for remote work, start-ups and skilled workers, sets up an Electronic Travel Authorisation programme, and adopts a First Safe Country Principle for asylum seekers. Permanent residency would no longer convert automatically into citizenship under the new architecture; a separate merit application would be required.
The paper sits at policy stage. Parliament must pass enabling Acts before any element binds in law, and no timetable has been published for those Acts. The naming of a remote-work visa category at Cabinet level is itself the news; until the national assembly receives the bill, the rest is signalling. Read against the DHA stay concession of late March , the same week describes a department writing the future at one desk and rolling forward an emergency patch at another.
For long-stay communities outside the nomad cohort, the merit pivot raises a separate question. Around 178,000 holders of the ZEP (Zimbabwean Exemption Permit, granted to long-stay Zimbabwean residents) lose the automatic permanent-residency path the previous regime offered. A points-based system scores applicants on skills, education, language and experience; a working life of low-credentialed residence does not earn points under the new criteria.
Nicholas Ngqabutho Mabhena, Zimbabwean Community Chair, told Southerton Business Times that "you will have a Zimbabwean who has been here since 1994 who cannot become a citizen because they do not meet the necessary skills requirements" 2. The figure he names is the operational test of the architecture: a points-based pathway to citizenship is fair only to the cohort whose skills the points reward, and the white paper offers no transitional credit for years already given.
