ATM welcomes establishment of impeachment committee on Phala Phala

The African Transformation Movement has welcomed the National Assembly Speaker’s decision to set up an impeachment committee for President Cyril Ramaphosa following a Constitutional Court ruling last Friday.

The committee stems from a court order that Parliament must allow the president to respond to evidence of foreign currency stolen from his Phala Phala farm in 2020. ATM spokesperson Zama Ntshona described the move as an important constitutional step but urged that the process be conducted with integrity, fairness and independence.

COSATU has rejected the committee’s makeup of 31 members drawn from all 18 parties. Parliamentary coordinator Matthew Parks said the allocation gives the African National Congress only nine seats instead of the 12 it is entitled to based on its 40 percent share of seats after the 2024 election.

During a heated question-and-answer session in the National Assembly on Thursday, opposition MPs from the MKP, EFF and ATM staged a walkout and labelled Ramaphosa a constitutional delinquent over the court ruling.

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A dramatic courtroom scene from the Constitutional Court hearing on President Ramaphosa's impeachment over Phala Phala.
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South Africa's Constitutional Court has ruled that Parliament acted unconstitutionally by blocking an impeachment inquiry into President Cyril Ramaphosa in 2022. The decision requires the National Assembly to establish an impeachment committee to examine the Phala Phala matter. Opposition parties immediately called for the president's resignation.

South Africa's Constitutional Court ruled today that parliament must establish an impeachment committee to examine allegations against President Cyril Ramaphosa over the Phala Phala farm theft.

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South Africa's National Assembly Speaker Thoko Didiza has begun the process of forming a 31-member impeachment committee to examine allegations against President Cyril Ramaphosa over foreign currency found at his Phala Phala farm. The move follows a Constitutional Court ruling last Friday that declared a parliamentary rule unconstitutional and required the committee's establishment. Political parties must submit names for the committee by 22 May 2026.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has filed papers in the Western Cape High Court to interdict the start of impeachment proceedings. The application seeks to pause the process until a September review of the Section 89 report on the Phala Phala matter. The Economic Freedom Fighters have pledged to oppose the bid.

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President Cyril Ramaphosa addressed South Africans on Monday to declare he will not resign following the Constitutional Court ruling on the Phala Phala matter. He announced plans to seek a judicial review of the independent panel report. The president maintained that he has committed no crime.

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