Jump to navigation

South Africa

Speaker puts the ANC in the dock

Mapisa-Nqakula said she would take 'special leave' after investigators raided her home following claims of corruption and bribery  

The beleaguered African National Congress (ANC) is weighing up its options amid a damaging corruption probe against National Assembly Speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula that could do more harm to its chances in May's general elections.

Last week, Mapisa-Nqakula announced she would take 'special leave' two days after investigators from the National Prosecution Authority raided her Johannesburg home. The five-hour search was linked to allegations of corruption and bribery during her time as defence minister from 2012 to 2021.

Acting Speaker, Lechesa Tsenoli, has agreed to a request for a motion of no confidence to be tabled by the opposition Democratic Alliance, although a date has not yet been set.

ANC chair Gwede Mantashe has dismissed the motion as 'opportunistic'.

'We have not had a caucus about it, but I will not support it,' he added. 

But backing the Speaker two months ahead of a general election that is set to be the closest since the restoration of democracy in South Africa in 1994, could cause more damage to the ruling party now polling below 40%.

On Monday, prosecutors set out their case against Mapisa-Nqakula in an eight-hour court ruling. The speaker is seeking a High Court injunction to delay her arrest, a decision on which is expected on 2 April.



Related Articles

Who makes the shirts?

China's booming exports cause political problems for Mbeki's ruling alliance

President Hu Jintao missed out South Africa on his tour of Africa and the Gulf last month, when he visited Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Nigeria and Kenya. That wasn't...


Getting their own back

Bulelani Ngcuka, South Africa’s former National Public Prosecutor and boss of the Scorpions anti-corruption investigators, is the man most hated by African National Congress President Jacob Zuma and...


Banker is as banker does

Foreign money is flooding in but Finance Minister Chris Liebenberg's low risk strategy is yet to cut unemployment

There are two sets of statistics on South Africa's economy. One tells an economic story only marginally less miraculous than that of the political transition: foreigners investing a...


Zuma's anti-Gordhan play

President Jacob Zuma is hesitating over a reshuffle which could tear the African National Congress apart

President Jacob Zuma has become increasingly irritated with his respected Minister of Finance, Pravin Gordhan, who was widely praised after presenting a balanced budget on 22 February amidst...


The fight of the century

Zuma and Malema are marshalling their forces for a showdown. Even a probe into ‘the arms deal’ is involved

President Jacob Zuma’s mid-September decision to form a commission of inquiry into the controversial arms deal of the late 1990s is being widely seen as an attempt to...