I n December, South Africa’s ruling African National Congress (ANC) will hold its elective conference, and key provinces have indicated that they will support President Cyril Ramaphosa’s bid to be re-elected as the party’s leader.
But a personal scandal could see him face an impeachment vote before the conference even takes place.
On June 1, 2022, the former national spy agency boss Arthur Fraser filed a criminal complaint against Ramaphosa, accusing him of money laundering and bribery to cover up a February 2020 heist at his game farm, in which it is alleged that $4m in illicit cash was stolen.
Ramaphosa subsequently issued a statement confirming a robbery took place at his Phala Phala farm but denying any wrongdoing.
The opposition wants Ramaphosa to answer questions about the scandal. But the president also has to answer to several investigating agencies including the elite crime-fighting agency, the Hawks, as well as the office of the Public Protector and the South African Reserve Bank.
In August, Ramaphosa refused to answer questions in parliament related to the burglary and again reiterated that he wants “law enforcement agencies investigating the case to be given the space to do their work”.
On September 9, several opposition parties marched to the office of acting Public Protector Kholeka Gcaleka to demand the release of a report on the alleged robbery.
But while law enforcement agencies are busy investigating various aspects of the burglary, National Assembly Speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula has appointed an independent panel that includes the country’s top judge, former Chief Justice Sandile Ngcobo, to conduct a preliminary assessment on whether Ramaphosa should face an impeachment inquiry over alleged misconduct related to the burglary.
The panel of three people has yet to begin its assessment, but will have 30 days from when it starts to report back to the speaker. If the panel recommends impeachment, a special parliamentary committee then decides whether to call an impeachment vote in parliament. If at least two-thirds of legislators support the motion, the president is to be immediately removed from office.
Although the ANC still has a parliamentary majority – holding 230 out of 400 seats – Ramaphosa has enemies in the party, the scandal has triggered a public outcry, and the impeachment process will likely be completed before the ANC’s elective conference.
‘Ramaphosa must go’
In South Africa’s political system, there are no direct presidential elections. The leader of the party with a majority in parliament becomes president.
Since the fall of apartheid rule in 1994, Nelson Mandela and Kgalema Motlanthe have been the only presidents not wrested from power.
Former presidents Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma were both forced to resign over allegations of misconduct.
Ramaphosa took office in 2018 after defeating a Zuma-backed candidate in the ANC general elections and pledged to root out state corruption.
He has faced a tough few years, tasked with steering the country through the COVID-19 pandemic as well as facing high unemployment, violence and crime, major unrest, crippling power blackouts and internal ANC squabbles.
But the Phala Phala farm scandal now poses the biggest threat to his presidency.
The public has been outraged by the scandal, with #RamaphosaMustGo and #PhalaPhalaFarm regularly trending on social media and protesters calling on him to step down.
Opposition political parties have called for him to step down, with the loudest demands coming from Julius Malema, a former ANC youth league leader who now leads the left-wing Economic Freedom Fighters party.
“Ramaphosa must know that his days are numbered in that office of the president,” Malema told thousands of EFF members at the party’s ninth anniversary celebrations on July 30.
Malema and his EFF were instrumental in the removal of former President Zuma by disrupting his addresses in parliament and maintaining calls on him to resign.