JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
South African president Cyril Ramaphosa was facing calls Thursday to step down after a damning parliamentary probe found he may have breached the country’s anti-corruption laws in connection with the alleged theft of a large amount of money from his Phala Phala game farm.
The calls follow allegations
by the country’s former head of intelligence, Arthur Fraser, that Ramaphosa
tried to conceal the theft of a huge sum of cash from his farm in 2020.
According to the report,
Ramaphosa claimed the stolen money amounted to $580 000, disputing the initial
amount of $4 million that Fraser alleged was stolen.
The findings have led to calls
from opposition parties and Ramaphosa’s detractors within the ruling African
National Congress party for him to step down.
President Ramaphosa has denied
any wrongdoing, insisting that the money was proceeds from the sale of animals
at his farm.
The ANC’s national executive committee, the party’s highest decision-making body, is expected to urgently meet Thursday evening to be briefed on the matter and possibly determine Ramaphosa’s fate.
It comes as Ramaphosa is
seeking re-election as party leader during the ANC’s national conference next
month. Clinching the party leadership would, in turn, enable him to run again
for South Africa’s presidency in 2024.
“In all the circumstances, we
think that the evidence presented to the Panel, prima facie, establishes that
the President may be guilty of a serious violation of certain sections of the
constitution,” the panel found.
The report also criticized how
Ramaphosa failed to inform the police in line with proper procedure, choosing
instead to entrust the matter to the head of his presidential protection unit.
The panel raised serious
questions about where the money came from and why it wasn’td disclosed to
financial authorities.
“Another troubling feature
about the source of the stolen foreign currency, is that the theft was never
reported to the South African Police Services for investigation as an ordinary
crime. Nor was the theft reported under the section 34(1) of PRECCA,” reads the
report.
The panel said that Ramaphosa
put himself into a situation of conflict of interest.
“A serious misconduct in that
the President violated section 96(2)(b) by exposing himself to a situation
involving a conflict between his official responsibilities and his private
business,” said the panel.
The main opposition party, the
Democratic Alliance (DA) is among those calling for Ramaphosa to be impeached.
“The report is clear and
unambiguous. President Ramaphosa most likely did breach a number of
Constitutional provisions and has a case to answer. Impeachment proceedings
into his conduct must go ahead, and he will have to offer far better, more
comprehensive explanations than we have been given so far,” said DA leader John
Steenhuisen.
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