Business Day

Phala Phala debate before ANC votes

- Erin Bates Legal Writer batese@businessli­ve.co.za

The National Assembly is set to debate the independen­t panel report on the Phala Phala saga on December 6, just 10 days before the ANC’s 55th elective conference, leaving analysts divided on the cost to President Cyril Ramaphosa in the ANC’s leadership race.

The National Assembly is set to debate the independen­t panel report on the Phala Phala saga on December 6, just 10 days before the ANC’s 55th elective conference, leaving analysts divided on the cost to president Cyril Ramaphosa in the ANC’s leadership race.

“If he comes off as not having committed any crime or anything untoward as a result of the panel’s recommenda­tion, then it gives him the upper hand. Even then, he has to deal with branches that are not on his side,” said Global Institute for Dialogue analyst Sanusha Naidu.

The ANC’s 4,250 delegates gather at Nasrec in Johannesbu­rg from December 16 to 20.

Head of the School of Public Leadership at Stellenbos­ch University Prof Zweli Ndevu said: “Negative outcomes of the panel review will affect the president’s ambition to get a second term.”

Professor of public law at the University of Cape Town Richard Calland said, “Is it enough to bring him down? My instinct is not [...] I think he will prevail again on this issue.”

Senior lecturer in history and political studies at Nelson Mandela University Ntsikelelo Breakfast said: “I think at the moment he stands a chance of winning the upcoming conference of the ANC.”

Parliament will hold a special hybrid sitting after it was due to close for 2022. MPs will decide on the next step in an impeachmen­t vote against the president. They will receive the report in the first week of December.

The matter relates to the alleged theft of millions of US dollars from Ramaphosa’s Phala Phala farm in Limpopo in 2020.

The ANC, DA, IFP and EFF have welcomed the opportunit­y to debate the report before the National Assembly rises.

“There are people who have a strategic interest in those findings and want to use them to beef up the arguments he must step down,” said Breakfast. Seniors in the ANC — such as presidenti­al contender Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma — have urged Ramaphosa to step aside.

The National Assembly’s programme committee chose the December 6 date on Thursday, after speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula granted panel chair retired chief justice Sandile Ngcobo’s request for an extension to November 30 a day earlier. Parliament’s spokespers­on said Ngcobo asked for more time due to “ground still to be covered and the available resources”.

Breakfast said: “This is a serious matter with implicatio­ns. You cannot be hasty. You cannot rush into releasing the report of this nature.”

After the National Assembly has debated the report by Ngcobo and his fellow panellists, retired judge Thokozile Masipa and senior advocate Mahlape Sello, parliament will rise and the ANC will choose its next leader. Any recommenda­tion of an impeachmen­t process would proceed only next year.

Naidu said what is to follow hinges on whether the panel “gives Ramaphosa’s enemies the traction to deepen their push against him”. Should it “extinguish” the Phala Phala scandal, his detractors would be on the back foot ahead of the ANC conference, she continued, unless “they have an ace up their sleeve to disrupt and stick to their call for his demise further ahead and at Nasrec”.

Ndevu said ANC branches “will have a difficult task of deciding whether to re-elect a person” who has been the subject of a possible impeachmen­t vote. “It will make the task to get a second term a huge mountain to climb,” he said.

Calland, who was nominated for Ngcobo’s panel but withdrew in September, slated Ramaphosa’s answers on Phala Phala in parliament on August 30. However, he thought the president was “covered and clear” ahead of Nasrec next month. “It’s dented his integrity and his credibilit­y. But it doesn’t really harm his prospects,” he said.

While there were divisions in the ANC, Breakfast did not expect the party — which holds a majority 230 seats in the National Assembly — to “expose” the president. “Opposition parties by themselves will not be in a position to vote against him and impeach him, because they don’t have the numbers,” he said.

Phala Phala, he said, is eroding Ramaphosa’s standing in the court of public opinion: “He has given his political enemies or detractors ammunition to take a swipe at him. There are gaps in his explanatio­n.”

Naidu noted the ANC debate over Phala Phala was far more heated than that over Bosasa and the R500,000 donation Ramaphosa’s CR17 campaign accepted from the disgraced company. “This is the final roll of the dice for some of the seniors in the party,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa