The department of Home Affairs said it has cleared a backlog of 247 500
identity documents which had started accumulating since November 2023
following a change in IT service providers.
The Department of Home affairs said it has cleared a backlog of 247 500
identity documents which had started accumulating since November 2023
following a change in IT service providers.
In a statement released on Wednesday, the department said the changeover
created a bottleneck in multiple areas in the production value chain.
This impacted the office of application, application authentication,
printing, and the final issuing of the ID.
“The clearing of the ID backlog, which had been accumulating since
November 2023, within a single month, serves as yet more tangible proof
that long-standing challenges at Home Affairs can be resolved when we
work in a systematic and focused manner,” said the department’s
minister, Leon Schreiber.
“The clearing of this specific backlog also signifies our commitment to
turn Home Affairs into a powerful economic enabler, as the individuals
affected by the backlog can now seek employment, open accounts, and gain
access to social grants,” he added.
Moreover, Schreiber said this action should lead to growing confidence
in the department’s ability to drive the reforms required for Home
Affairs to deliver dignity to all.
The department is also making progress in reducing the visa backlog and
taking steps towards digital transformation.
“We still have much more to do. Our apex priority is the wholesale
digital transformation of Home Affairs to create a new system where
South Africans should be able to submit ID and other applications from
the comfort of their own home through a digital platform, followed by
the delivery of these documents to their doorstep,” said Schreiber.