In a landmark ruling that has sent shockwaves through the legal and humanitarian communities, South Africa’s Constitutional Court has declared that asylum seekers cannot lodge repeat claims after their initial application is rejected. The decision, handed down on Tuesday, effectively aligns the country’s asylum framework with the UK’s controversial ‘one chance’ rule, sparking fears of a global hardening of borders against those fleeing persecution.
The case, brought by a Zimbabwean national who had made three separate asylum applications over a decade, hinged on the interpretation of the Refugees Act. The court argued that allowing endless appeals undermines the integrity of the system and places an ‘unreasonable burden’ on the state. But critics warn this creates a Black Mirror scenario where human lives are reduced to algorithmic probabilities, with each denial pushing refugees into the shadows.
For me, as someone who spent years in Silicon Valley watching the rise of predictive analytics, this is deeply troubling. We are seeing a ‘quantum shift’ in how nations treat the displaced. The UK’s Nationality and Borders Act 2022 already imposes a ‘one chance’ rule: if you fail to raise your claim at the earliest opportunity, you lose the right to appeal. South Africa’s court is now echoing that logic, albeit with a legal tweak: repeat claims are barred only if the new evidence could have been presented earlier. The problem? Asylum seekers often lack legal representation, internet access, or even the psychological stability to compile evidence of torture or political persecution.
Let me put this in tech terms: Your user experience of seeking refuge is now a binary decision tree. If your first claim fails, the system locks you out, like a failed login attempt with no password reset. This is not just harsh; it is a failure of design. We know from quantum computing that superposition—the ability to be in multiple states at once—is a fundamental property of complex systems. Human desperation is similarly entangled with hope and trauma. A single rejection does not erase the reasons for fleeing.
South Africa’s court argued that allowing repeat claims would create inefficiency. But efficiency at the cost of justice is a bug, not a feature. In my work on AI ethics, I have seen how biases become embedded in decision-making models. The ‘repeat claim’ rule assumes bad faith: that asylum seekers are gaming the system. The data tells a different story. Most repeat applications involve new evidence that surfaces after the first denial—often because the applicant was too frightened or uneducated to provide it earlier. In digital sovereignty terms, the court has imposed a protocol that prioritises system integrity over human integrity.
The timing could not be worse. As climate change triggers mass migration and conflicts rage from Ukraine to Sudan, borders everywhere are tightening. The UK is now exporting its asylum model through trade deals and diplomatic pressure. South Africa, a signatory to international refugee conventions, has traditionally been more generous. This ruling erodes that legacy. It creates a chilling effect: if you are a Zimbabwean dissident or a Congolese victim of war, you now have one shot. Miss it, and you become undocumented, vulnerable to detention or deportation.
There is a silver lining. The court left a small door open for constitutional challenges on a case-by-case basis. But this is like a bug bounty program for human rights: you must find the exploit in the law yourself. Most asylum seekers lack the resources to litigate. The real fix is political. The South African Parliament could amend the Refugees Act to allow genuine new claims. That would require acknowledging that the state’s processing system is flawed, which is a hard ask.
I worry we are moving toward a world where the ‘user experience’ of seeking asylum is deliberately friction-filled, designed to deter. That is not innovation. It is regression. As we build more sophisticated technologies for surveillance and identity verification, we must remember that asylum is not a privilege to be algorithmically allocated. It is a right. And rights cannot be reduced to a single opportunity. If we treat refugees like spam emails, we lose our humanity. The court has spoken, but the debate is far from over.







