
In Conversation With Goodenough Mashego- political analyst
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Political parties in Parliament have finally submitted their representatives for the Section 89 impeachment committee tasked with investigating President Cyril Ramaphosa over the Phala Phala scandal — ending weeks of delays that drew criticism from opposition parties and governance analysts.
The committee follows a Constitutional Court ruling earlier this month which found that Parliament acted unlawfully when it blocked an impeachment inquiry into the Phala Phala matter in 2022. The judgment effectively reopened the path for formal parliamentary scrutiny into whether Ramaphosa has a case to answer regarding allegations linked to the theft of foreign currency from his Phala Phala game farm in Limpopo.
The African National Congress (ANC) faced criticism after taking longer than other parties to finalise its MPs for the committee, prompting accusations that the process was being deliberately slowed down to politically protect the president. Opposition parties argued that accountability processes involving the head of state should not be subjected to internal party manoeuvring or delays.
The committee follows a Constitutional Court ruling earlier this month which found that Parliament acted unlawfully when it blocked an impeachment inquiry into the Phala Phala matter in 2022. The judgment effectively reopened the path for formal parliamentary scrutiny into whether Ramaphosa has a case to answer regarding allegations linked to the theft of foreign currency from his Phala Phala game farm in Limpopo.
The African National Congress (ANC) faced criticism after taking longer than other parties to finalise its MPs for the committee, prompting accusations that the process was being deliberately slowed down to politically protect the president. Opposition parties argued that accountability processes involving the head of state should not be subjected to internal party manoeuvring or delays.

