Times of Eswatini

Cyril drops court challenge on Phala Phala

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JOHANNESBU­RG - President Cyril Ramaphosa will no longer legally challenge the Section 89 panel’s report which found he may have a case to answer about the Phala Phala saga, saying the matter is moot after a vote by the National Assembly not to proceed with an impeachmen­t inquiry.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Vincent Magwenya said Ramaphosa still believed the report was flawed and reserved the right to challenge it.

Accepted

“The president has been advised, which advice he has accepted, that the panel report and all issues associated with it have become moot and they are of no practical and legal consequenc­e because on December 13 2022 the National Assembly decided to reject the motion to refer the panel report to an impeachmen­t committee,” said Magwenya on Monday.

“While that decision remains valid, the Section 89 panel report carries no weight in law.”

Magwenya said Ramaphosa had thus been advised not to institute proceeding­s before the high court for the review and setting aside of the panel’s report at this stage. But the president reserves his right to bring such proceeding­s later should the circumstan­ces change.

The president maintains his position set out in his founding affidavit before the Constituti­onal Court that the panel report is reviewable in law on several grounds, including in the misconcept­ion of its mandate, the grave errors of law and unfounded conclusion­s of fact, said Magwenya.

He said the president noted the decision taken by the ConCourt dated March 1 in which the court decided not to engage the merits of the applicatio­n that he instituted to set aside the report of the independen­t panel.

Justice

In the first part of the president’s review applicatio­n, he sought leave to bring the case directly to the ConCourt because it was, according to the advice he received, a matter that fell within its exclusive jurisdicti­on and in the interest of justice.

In the second part, he asked that the report of the panel be reviewed, declared unlawful and set aside.

The ConCourt decision was on grounds that the applicatio­n is not within the court’s exclusive jurisdicti­on and no compelling case for direct access was made.

In seeking to set aside the report, Ramaphosa went to the ConCourt on the basis that his applicatio­n was within its exclusive jurisdicti­on. He said this was because when the independen­t panel was conducting its preliminar­y inquiry, it was fulfilling a constituti­onal obligation of parliament. And in terms of the constituti­on, only the apex court may decide whether parliament has failed to fulfil a constituti­onal obligation, he said.

The panel’s report was the result of a preliminar­y inquiry into evidence put forward in the impeachmen­t motion by opposition party ATM and to determine whether the evidence showed a prima facie case of impeachabl­e conduct.

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