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South African President Seeks to Stop Impeachment Probe Over ‘Farmgate’ Scandal

JOHANNESBURG, June 12 (Reuters) – South African President ⁠Cyril ⁠Ramaphosa filed an ⁠urgent court application on Friday to try to ​stop a parliamentary impeachment process from starting to probe allegations ‌related to his “Farmgate” scandal, ‌court documents showed.

• Ramaphosa wants the high court to ⁠first ⁠make a decision on a separate application he made to ​set aside an independent panel’s misconduct findings over the scandal, in which bundles of cash were stolen from a sofa ​on his farm in 2020.

• The president said $580,000 in cash ⁠was stolen ⁠and it was ⁠proceeds ​from the sale of buffaloes, but the episode raised questions about ​why the money ⁠was hidden in furniture and whether he had declared it. Ramaphosa has denied wrongdoing.

• South Africa’s constitutional court revived impeachment proceedings against Ramaphosa last month, finding that a ⁠parliamentary vote to stop the process in 2022 was invalid.

• The ⁠high court is due to hear his case against the misconduct findings from September 2 to 4.

• Ramaphosa, 73, has been head of state since 2018 and his second presidential term is due to end in 2029.

• Farmgate has been a major embarrassment for him as he came to power on a ⁠pledge to fight corruption and clean up the image of his African National Congress (ANC) party.

• But political analysts expect him to survive if the impeachment process ​goes to a vote in parliament.

(Reporting by Sfundo ​Parakozov; Editing by Alexander Winning)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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