In a move that would have made the late Lord Denning nod with grim satisfaction, South Africa’s Constitutional Court has slammed the brakes on a pernicious legal merry-go-round: the serial asylum claim. The ruling, which blocks repeat applications by those whose original bids have been rejected, is a refreshing slap of common sense in a continent increasingly drowning in bureaucratic piety. Yet the implications ripple far beyond Johannesburg or Cape Town. They strike at the heart of the Commonwealth’s fraying migration compact.
Let us set the scene: The Commonwealth, that ramshackle vestige of imperial hubris, was never designed for mass migration. It was a club for chaps, for cricket scores and colonial administrators swapping tea and memos. But the post-war years saw its norms evolve into a tangled web of family reunion, student visas, and asylum procedures. Now, with the Global West buckling under migrant surges, the strain on Commonwealth migration rules has become a structural flaw, a crack in the china that threatens to shatter the entire teacup.
South Africa, to its credit, has long been a Commonwealth bellwether. Its constitution, lauded for its progressive guarantees, has also spawned a litigation culture that turns asylum into a game of musical chairs. The court’s decision is a necessary corrective: no more infinite do-overs. But the deeper malaise is intellectual. The elite’s fetish for unfettered movement, its disdain for borders as ‘colonial’ or ‘racist’, has produced a policy vacuum. The result? A system that rewards persistence over need, clever lawyers over vulnerable families.
The logical endpoint of this decadence is the collapse of the Commonwealth’s migration principles. Already, we see Australia’s Pacific Solution, Britain’s Rwanda plan, Canada’s points based system hardening. Each country retreating into cobbled together national expedients. The dream of a free movement zone, a kind of post imperial Schengen, is dead. And it should be. The Commonwealth was never a single market; it is a family of nations, and families, like empires, must know their limits.
What the South African ruling exposes is the intellectual bankruptcy of the ‘asylum industry’. Repeat claims are not a sign of genuine persecution but of institutional gaming. They clog tribunals, drain resources, and corrode public trust. My warning is this: If the Commonwealth cannot reform its migration norms, it will dissolve into a cacophony of national vetoes. The centre cannot hold, as the poet said. Perhaps it is time to admit that the Commonwealth’s true role is not to manage mass movement but to cultivate the civilising ties of trade, education, and mutual respect.
Decadence wears many masks: legalism, humanitarian cant, bureaucratic evasion. But a healthy polity knows when to say no. South Africa’s top court has said it for the asylum repeaters. Now, let us hope the rest of the Commonwealth finds the courage to say it for the system itself.








