Deputy Speaker, I thank the hon member for the question. As I have indicated, when we develop plans and policy, it will be on the basis of an appropriate evaluation of practice and experience.
Should it be that as we work on the plan we find that in a particular part of the country we are dealing with a large number of applications for asylum, we should ensure that close to that border, or at it, we have a facility that can process those who present themselves as seeking asylum. It must be at that point; it cannot be anywhere else.
I am a former exile. Our parents did not get to the Lesotho border, ask for a tourist visa, get into a distant part of Lesotho - the top of a mountain! - and then remember, hey, they were supposed to have remembered they were asylum seekers! But that is what is happening here, and we cannot have that going on!
Therefore, we must develop appropriately located offices and have services to deal with people in the humane and dignified way that the former Minister, Prince Buthelezi, wanted when he approved the legislation as the first Minister of Home Affairs of a democratic South Africa. So, we will want to retain that dignity, but we do not want to have practices that are different from every other country in the world, where you can just be all over the country and change your status at will. We are not going to allow that to continue. Thank you.