Jump to navigation

South Africa

Public Protector clears Ramaphosa over farm cash

This latest ruling should allow the President to focus on his agenda – ending the power cuts and winning next year's vote

The rejection by the Public Protector of accusations against President Cyril Ramaphosa of wrongdoing over the discovery that he and his employees had been storing hundreds of thousands of dollars at his game farm boosts the beleaguered leader after his most difficult year in power.

The discovery of the US dollars in Ramaphosa's farm, which breaches the country's foreign exchange and anti-money laundering regulations, emerged in the course of an investigation into a theft at the building. Now the Public Protector's assessment ends the saga for Ramaphosa after the parliament had earlier voted against impeachment on the matter.

'Aggregated against the standard imposed by the executive ethics code it is found that there is no basis upon which to conclude that the president contravened' the law, interim ombudswoman, Kholeka Gcaleka said last week, after ending her inquiry.

The story broke in June 2022 when Arthur Fraser, the former head of the country's State Security Agency filed a complaint with the police alleging that Ramaphosa had concealed the 2020 theft of about $4m in cash from his game farm in Limpopo province (AC Vol 63 No 12, Zuma's securocrats rattle Ramaphosa & Vol 63 No 13, 'Farmgate' rocks Ramaphosa). 

Ramaphosa contended that only $580,000 had been stolen and had been intended as payment for livestock, also raising questions about whether he had broken state regulations on holding foreign currency.

Fraser's close ties to former President Jacob Zuma ensured that the case became another side of the factional battles between Ramaphosa and Zuma's loyalists and distracted the Presidency from the deepening energy and economic crises.

Last year, an independent panel led by former Chief Justice Sandile Ngcobo convened by parliament found that Ramaphosa 'may have committed' serious violations and misconduct. 

A move to start impeachment proceedings was quickly defeated in parliament and the process did not derail Ramaphosa's confirmation as leader of the African National Congress party at last December's elective congress (AC Vol 63 No 25, President's fate rests with party). 

That may have further weakened Zuma's  faction in the ANC but Ramaphosa will continue to face residual opposition ahead of next year's elections – even if no one is prepared to risk formally challenging until after that vote.



Related Articles

Zuma's securocrats rattle Ramaphosa

A wounded Ramaphosa is consolidating support for a second five-year term but prospects are bleak for the ANC winning outright victory in 2024

Arthur Fraser, the former head of the country's State Security Agency, has called for a criminal investigation against Cyril Ramaphosa, which will badly damage the ruling African N...


'Farmgate' rocks Ramaphosa

The 'cash-in-the-couch' scandal has damaged the President. It is being exploited to the full by his enemies, but it doesn't look enough to unseat him

On a wintry day on 13 June in Johannesburg Carl Niehaus, the chief spokesperson of the African National Congress's so-called Radical Economic Transformation (RET) faction, led a de...


President's fate rests with party

After months of horse-trading and under the shadow of another corruption scandal, the ANC will decide this week on who will lead the party and country

The African National Congress's long-awaited 55th elective conference kicks off on 16 December after a week of political turmoil and crippling rolling blackouts. Cyril Ramaphosa wi...


Mbeki's triumph

The ANC just misses its target, the NP collapses, the DP rises, Holomisa returns

The overwhelming majority won by the African National Congress in the 2 June elections was spectacular if predictable. And it left opposition voters surprisingly unflustered, cons...


Short-pants to no pants

The former apartheid party negotiates its way to obscurity

The New National Party, heir to the old Afrikaner-apartheid tradition, hitched up in June 2000 to the Democratic Party, whose members claim to inherit South Africa's liberal tradit...