Ramaphosa chooses ruling party above South Africans by protecting under-fire Dipuo Peters who hid Prasa corruption
1 March 2024
Instead of firing former Transport Minister Dipuo Peters for her role in hiding Prasa corruption, President Cyril Ramaphosa again chose the unity of the ruling party over the interest of South Africans by simply suspending Peters as Deputy Minister of Small Business Development for one month. The move follows Peters’ suspension from Parliament following a decision in the Joint Committee on Ethics and Members' Interests after the damming findings of the State Capture Commissions which found she tried to stop investigations into R14 billion corruption at PRASA while Transport Minister.
How is it possible that someone who actively tried to cover up billions in state capture corruption gets away with a slap on the wrist by remaining in Ramaphosa's administration? The president’s move shows once again that he has no interest in fighting corruption and restoring the rule of law in South Africa and would rather protect those guilty to maintain unity in the ruling party above the interest of our people. In fact, Ramaphosa himself made use of state agencies to protect himself from Phala Phala scrutiny.
The suspension of the Deputy Minister furthermore highlights how deputy ministers play little to no role in the core functioning of ministries and therefore reinforces ActionSA’s belief that all deputy ministers should be eliminated. They serve no role aside as a patronage network for those loyal to the President while costing South African taxpayers millions.
ActionSA reiterates that under an ActionSA government, corruption will be declared public enemy number one to ensure that can re-establish the rule of law in the country. No one would be protected from corruption under ActionSA, and where people are found guilty of corruption, we will increase the minimum sentence to 15 years imprisonment without the possibility of a fine or parole.