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EFF and DA call for ad hoc committee to probe Phala Phala saga after ConCourt rules against Ramaphosa

EFF and DA call for ad hoc committee to probe Phala Phala saga after ConCourt rules against Ramaphosa
Presidency spokesperson Vincent Magwenya said the judgment ‘is not a blow to the President’ and Ramaphosa’s legal team would weigh its options.

The Constitutional Court on Wednesday dismissed President Cyril Ramaphosa’s bid to seek direct access to challenge the findings of the bruising Section 89 Independent Panel report into the Phala Phala scandal.  

The highest court in the land refused to grant the President direct access to the Constitutional Court to challenge the report’s findings against him, concluding that “no case has been made out for exclusive jurisdiction or direct access and the main application must be dismissed. Consequently, the application to intervene falls to be dismissed.”

The court decided not to award costs.



Crucially, the matter can still be taken to a lower court, meaning the President will have to approach the high court to challenge the report findings.

In briefing the media on Wednesday, the spokesperson for the Presidency, Vincent Magwenya, explained that the Constitutional Court judgment dealt with, “what [he] would call, a procedural matter with respect to the President seeking direct access to the Constitutional Court. The judgment does not pronounce on the merits of the case.”

The judgment, Magwenya maintained, “is not a blow to the President”. He said the President’s legal team would weigh its options.

Ramaphosa had, in December last year, petitioned the Constitutional Court to declare the Section 89 Phala Phala report as unlawful and to set it aside, Daily Maverick’s Queenin Masuabi reported.

Read more in Daily Maverick:The Fight Is On: Ramaphosa intends to challenge the Ngcobo Panel Report

In the second part of his affidavit, the President had applied for leave for the courts to allow him to bring the matter directly to the Constitutional Court in the interests of justice in terms of section 167(6)(a) of the Constitution and Rule 18 of the rules of this court.

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This came after an independent panel of experts — helmed by retired Chief Justice Sandile Ngcobo, and including Judge Thokozile Masipa and advocate Mahlape Sello was appointed by National Assembly Speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula last September, to determine whether Ramaphosa had a case to answer over the theft of foreign currency at his Phala Phala game farm in Limpopo.

Read more in Daily Maverick:Unpacking the Cyril Ramaphosa home robbery story, and why you should care

The President has found himself in the hot seat since the findings of the Section 89 Independent Panel report were made public in November last year. The three-person panel found that there was prima facie evidence that Ramaphosa may have violated the Constitution and abused his authority.

The panel found that Ramaphosa had an impeachment case to answer over violations of the Constitution for exposing himself to a conflict of interest, doing outside paid work and contravening the Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act, 12 of 2004, Daily Maverick’s Marianne Merten reported.




Following the scathing Section 89 report findings, it was rumoured that Ramaphosa was contemplating resigning, but backpedalled after discussions with his legal team and close allies. Magwenya later confirmed the President had “no intention of resigning”, despite the seriousness of the allegations levelled against him.

In December, the National Assembly — with ANC MPs leading the charge — voted to reject the adoption of the impeachment inquiry aimed at holding Ramaphosa accountable for allegedly concealing the crime committed at his game farm. This cleared the way for Ramaphosa to be re-elected as president of the ANC at the party’s elective conference in December 2022.

Read more in Daily Maverick: Ramaphosa takes strong anti-corruption stance, slams attempts to derail party’s unity project” 

Reacting to the Constitutional Court’s ruling on Wednesday, DA leader John Steenhuisen said the dismissal of Ramaphosa’s application by the court confirmed that the details of the report should be investigated by the National Assembly in the form of an ad hoc committee. The party has been pushing for an ad hoc committee to probe the Phala Phala saga for months.

Read more in Daily Maverick: Phala Phala scandal — opposition parties unite to pile pressure on Ramaphosa in Parliament 

“An ad hoc committee is the route that Parliament should have followed when this scandal first broke… It is highly irresponsible conduct by the President to bat the Phala Phala scandal between Parliament and the courts, all in an attempt to evade difficult questions and full transparency and accountability. 

“Ramaphosa had launched this court application to set aside the Section 89 report in a desperate attempt to save his political skin. Now that this attempt has been unanimously dismissed by the highest court in the land, it is time for the President to finally tell the full truth about Phala Phala,” a statement by Steenhuisen said.

Meanwhile, an EFF statement slammed the President’s “senseless” and “irrational” decision to approach the Constitutional Court in a bid to evade accountability. The two opposition parties displayed a rare moment of unity on Wednesday — both calling for the establishment of an ad hoc committee to investigate the Phala Phala scandal.  

The Red Berets repeated their longstanding demand for the President to resign.



Note: This timeline contains a summary of complex, intricate and often disputed details. Daily Maverick is likely not able to document everything. Please consult the supporting documents provided for further information.

This is a developing story and this timeline will continue to be updated. It was last updated on 1 December 2022. DM