South African Parliament to Form Impeachment Committee on Ramaphosa Cash Allegations
South Africa's Parliament announced it will establish an impeachment committee to review four-year-old allegations that President Cyril Ramaphosa hid the theft of more than $500,000 in cash from his game ranch. The move follows a Constitutional Court ruling that a 2022 parliamentary vote blocking impeachment proceedings was unconstitutional.
Abc NewsSouth Africa's Parliament said Monday it will establish an impeachment committee to reinvestigate four-year-old allegations that President Cyril Ramaphosa committed serious misconduct by hiding the theft of more than half a million dollars in cash, which had been stashed in a sofa at his game ranch.
The new decision follows a ruling by the Constitutional Court on Friday that a 2022 Parliament vote blocking impeachment proceedings against Ramaphosa over the scandal was unconstitutional. At the time of the vote, Ramaphosa's African National Congress party held a majority in Parliament.
The vote occurred despite an independent report that found evidence of wrongdoing by the president in allegedly not properly reporting the theft to police and attempting to keep an investigation to recover the money secret. The Constitutional Court said that, according to procedure, the 2022 independent report should have been referred to an impeachment committee for further investigation.
Impeaching the leader of Africa's top economy would require the support of at least two-thirds of lawmakers in the 400-member Parliament, according to the Constitution.
The multi-party impeachment committee still needs to conduct an investigation before any move to hold an impeachment vote. No time frame was given for that investigation in Monday's Parliament statement. Ramaphosa's African National Congress party lost its Parliament majority in a 2024 election and is now the largest party in a coalition government of 10 parties.
He still could survive an impeachment vote if his party's lawmakers back him. The allegations against Ramaphosa were first made by a former head of South Africa's state security agency, who walked into a police station in 2022 and accused the president of money laundering and other offenses over the money. It emerged the theft happened in 2020 and had been kept secret.
Ramaphosa denied wrongdoing and said the money came from the legitimate sale of buffaloes on his ranch. Questions arose over the source of the money and why it was hidden in a sofa. The 2022 independent report said there was “legitimate doubt” over the source of the money, and some evidence that the amount was more than the $580,000 Ramaphosa claimed.
It also said Ramaphosa had used the head of his presidential protection unit and others to “surreptitiously” try and track down the suspects. " — Ramaphosa's office (Abc News) The scandal first surfaced when the former security official made the accusations in 2022. Ramaphosa took office in 2018 on an anti-corruption platform.
Key Facts
Story Timeline
6 events- 2020
Theft of cash occurred at Ramaphosa's game ranch and was kept secret.
1 sourceAbc News - 2022
Former security official accused Ramaphosa of money laundering; independent report found evidence of wrongdoing.
1 sourceAbc News - 2022
Parliament voted to block impeachment proceedings despite the report.
1 sourceAbc News - 2024
African National Congress lost its parliamentary majority in election.
1 sourceAbc News - 2026-05-09
Constitutional Court ruled 2022 vote was unconstitutional.
1 sourceAbc News - 2026-05-12
Parliament announced formation of impeachment committee.
1 sourceAbc News
Potential Impact
- 01
The impeachment committee will conduct an investigation into the 2022 independent report before any vote.
- 02
Ramaphosa could survive an impeachment vote if his party's coalition lawmakers support him.
- 03
An impeachment vote would require support from at least two-thirds of Parliament members.
- 04
The process could further test the stability of South Africa's 10-party coalition government.
- 05
No timeline has been set for completion of the committee's investigation.
Transparency Panel
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