Ramaphosa wins key battle with Public Protector

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa notched up a key victory in his long-running battle with the nation’s controversial anti-graft ombudsman, when the High Court overturned her finding that he’d misled lawmakers about a campaign donation.

Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane said in a report last year that Ramaphosa deceived parliament about a payment to his 2017 bid to win control of the ruling party and instructed legislators to censure him for violating the constitution and the executive ethics code. The president challenged her directive, saying he didn’t know about the funding, inadvertently failed to disclose it and rectified his mistake as soon as possible.

Ramaphosa acted in good faith and didn’t wilfully mislead parliament, and Mkhwebane demonstrated “a fundamentally flawed approach” in finding against him, the court said in a scathing ruling handed down in Pretoria, the capital. It found she had exceeded her mandate because she had no right to investigate private donations to a party campaign.

The Public Protector “recklessly ignored the evidence at her disposal,” said North Gauteng High Court Judge President Dunstan Mlambo, who ordered Mkhwebane to pay the legal costs of the case. “She breached her duty to approach every investigation in an open-minded fashion.”

The ruling is yet another blow to Mkhwebane, who is facing a parliamentary probe into her fitness to hold office after the courts nullified several of her previous rulings and rebuked her for failing to stick to her constitutional mandate. Her critics have accused her of playing politics and siding with Ramaphosa’s opponents in a power struggle in the ruling party.

Scandal-marred tenure
Mkhwebane, who served in the state security agency during former President Jacob Zuma’s scandal-marred tenure, denies the allegations and says some of the criticism is aimed at undermining her investigations. Firing her before her term ends in 2023 would require the backing of two-thirds of lawmakers.

Mkhwebane initiated an investigation into Ramaphosa at the request of the main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, which questioned whether a R500 000 payment his campaign received from Gavin Watson, the former chief executive officer of services company Bosasa, was above board. Testimony given to a judicial panel has implicated the company, which had business dealings with one of Ramaphosa’s sons, in paying bribes to senior government officials to win contracts.

The court said Mkhwebane demonstrated a complete lack of knowledge and understanding of the law when she found that money donated to Ramaphosa’s campaign may have been laundered. Her directive that Ramaphosa publish all donations he received was also set aside.

Mkhwebane will study the judgment before deciding on a further course of action, her spokesman Oupa Segalwe told reporters.

© 2020 Bloomberg L.P.
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Source: moneyweb.co.za