
 
South African Home Affairs Minister 
Malusi Gigaba resigned on Tuesday, the presidency announced, two weeks 
after a public standards watchdog said he had violated the constitution 
by lying under oath in court.
Gigaba, a close ally of ousted 
former president Jacob Zuma, had recently vowed not to step down after 
also being caught up in a leaked sex tape scandal.
A statement 
from President Cyril Ramaphosa’s office announced that Gigaba said he 
had resigned “to relieve the President from undue pressure” and to allow
 Ramaphosa to focus on saving the country from “economic meltdown”.
Gigaba,
 47, was once seen as rising star of the ANC ruling party, leading the 
party’s youth wing and being quickly promoted into the ministerial 
ranks.
But he became entangled in graft allegations during Zuma’s time in office.
Gigaba’s
 exit removes a key Zuma loyalist from the government led since February
 by Ramaphosa, who has vowed to root out the corruption reputed to have 
flourished under Zuma.
Gigaba was reprimanded last month by the 
public protector ombudswoman after he testified in a 2017 court case 
filed by a company controlled by the wealthy Oppenheimer family.
Ombudswoman
 Busisiwe Mkhwebane recommended that Ramaphosa take disciplinary action 
against the minister for “telling an untruth under oath and before a 
court of law”.
– Zuma ally –
The allegations were probed after a complaint from the opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) party.
The court case hinged on whether Gigaba had given the Oppenheimers approval to have a private terminal at Johannesburg airport.
Gigaba has also said he was recently the target of extortion attempts after a private sex video was stolen by hacking.
Gigaba
 served as finance minister for a year under Zuma, who was ousted as 
president by the ANC party in February over mounting graft scandals.
When Ramaphosa succeeded Zuma, he moved Gigaba to the home affairs ministry.
Gigaba
 has been linked to corruption allegations against the wealthy Gupta 
family, who are suspected of benefitting from unfair and hugely 
lucrative government contracts under Zuma.
A judicial inquiry, 
which opened in August, is investigating allegations that Zuma and the 
Guptas organised a web of corrupt deals at government departments and 
public enterprises in a scandal known as “state capture”.
All the accused deny any wrongdoing.
South
 Africa, Africa’s most advanced economy, slipped into recession in the 
second quarter of this year, and suffers a stubbornly high unemployment 
of about 28 percent.
The country will hold general elections in May.
Nhlanhla Nene resigned as finance minister last month over undisclosed meetings with the Guptas.
 
 
 
 
 
 
      
    
  
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