logo
'I accept the dismissal': Nkabane speaks out after being fired by Ramaphosa

'I accept the dismissal': Nkabane speaks out after being fired by Ramaphosa

IOL News5 days ago
Fired Higher Education Minister Dr Nobuhle Nkabane defended her record on the SETA board appointments, stating she was ready with documents to prove her case before being removed from office.
Image: Supplied
"All the signs were there."
That's how former Higher Education Minister Dr. Nobuhle Nkabane described her reaction to being dismissed from the position by President Cyril Ramaphosa, adding that many people wanted her to be fired from the position.
Nkabane said she received a call from Ramaphosa on Monday informing her of his decision while she was on her way to Cape Town for a portfolio committee meeting on higher education scheduled for Tuesday.
'All signs were there…that there are some forces on the ground that want me out of the system,' she told broadcaster eNCA on Tuesday.
'To be honest, I am not even shocked, and I have just accepted the dismissal because the President, in terms of the Constitutional prerogative, has powers and functions. When you look at Section 91.2, he has the right to appoint and dismiss the deputy president, the ministers, as well as deputy ministers.'
'So, I accept the dismissal by the President and I take it positively, and I feel I have been honoured to have been entrusted with such a huge responsibility to lead the Department of Higher Education and Training, and post-school education and the training system entirely.'
'I think I'm a better version of myself than when I came, and I've learned a lot of things.'
Nkabane was under fire regarding the appointments of the controversial SETA board chairpersons.
The cabinet reshuffle follows growing scrutiny of Nkabane's role in what MPs have described as a 'misleading' explanation to Parliament about the SETA board appointment process.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Ad Loading
The appointments included individuals closely linked to the African National Congress (ANC), such as Buyambo Mantashe, son of Mineral Resources Minister Gwede Mantashe, and Dube-Ncube.
On Tuesday, IOL News reported that the Portfolio Committee on Higher Education found no formal panel was involved in appointing SETA board chairpersons, contradicting Nkabane's earlier claims.
Nkabane previously told Parliament that an 'independent panel' chaired by Advocate Terry Motau oversaw the appointments.
Motau, along with others named as panel members, including Nkabane's chief of staff, Nelisiwe Semane, and adviser Asisipho Solani - denied any involvement. All testified that no formal meeting or discussion regarding the appointments had taken place.
Ramaphosa has since appointed Buti Manamela, one of Nkabane's deputies, as the new minister of Higher Education and Training. Former KwaZulu-Natal Premier Dr. Nomusa Dube-Ncube was named deputy minister.
Nkabane added, 'But what is very disturbing, that I think I must as well speak about, is that there is a perception that I lied in Parliament. I was looking forward to this day so that I could clear my name.'
'I prepared nicely, files, appointment letters, and everything to prove to myself that I did not lie in Parliament. I am a professional. I am an academic. There's no way I can risk my reputation by lying in Parliament.
'I wanted to go to Parliament and clear my name today, having all the evidence that I followed due processes to make sure that systems are in place. But when the dust has settled, I will get an opportunity to clear my name,' Nkabane added.
Meanwhile, Members of Parliament (MPs) said they are considering calling Nkabane, in her capacity as a private member, to explain what led her to appoint ANC-linked members to the controversial SETA boards.
simon.majadibodu@iol.co.za
IOL Politics
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

[WATCH] Politricking with Tshidi Madia: Helen Zille
[WATCH] Politricking with Tshidi Madia: Helen Zille

Eyewitness News

time16 hours ago

  • Eyewitness News

[WATCH] Politricking with Tshidi Madia: Helen Zille

Zille shares her reaction to the firing of Minister Nkabane and weighs in on the unresolved issues with Health Minister Simelane while addressing the party's growing public frustration with ANC-led policy decisions, including the NHI and Expropriation Act. She reflects on John Steenhuisen's leadership and the DA's performance in national and local government. She speaks about the party's ambition to become a majority party. She also delves into succession politics and why Paul Mashatile remains a 'no-go' for the DA. She addresses the controversy around Andrew Whitfield's dismissal, and the DA's strategic positioning on foreign policy—from Washington to Zuma in Morocco. She wraps up the conversation by reflecting on racial identity politics, Liam Jacobs' departure, and the DA's evolving relationship with voters.

Proposed amendments could affect division of assets
Proposed amendments could affect division of assets

eNCA

time2 days ago

  • eNCA

Proposed amendments could affect division of assets

DURBAN - Part of South Africa's marriage law could soon be overhauled, with the General Laws Amendment Bill set to be tabled in Parliament. READ | Hong Kong govt proposes limited recognition of same-sex couples' rights One proposed change would empower the courts to redistribute assets in the event of a divorce or death, even overriding certain terms of a marriage contract. The aim is to protect spouses who might otherwise be left with nothing. Melusi Xulu, Managing Director at Donda Attorneys discuss this further with eNCA.

Letter to Mahlamba Ndlopfu — this week you finally found your backbone
Letter to Mahlamba Ndlopfu — this week you finally found your backbone

Daily Maverick

time3 days ago

  • Daily Maverick

Letter to Mahlamba Ndlopfu — this week you finally found your backbone

Ah, Chief Dwasaho! We do, indeed, live in interesting times, my President. This week, you finally found your backbone, possibly somewhere under the presidential mattress at Phala Phala Game Reserve, and 'removed' someone from your bloated Cabinet. Hhawu, Matamela! You? Fire someone? And not just anyone – uGal herself! Minister Dr Nobuhle Nkabane, once the proud guardian of our nation's knowledge factories, is now reduced to a political footnote without a farewell bouquet. Did you not know, my leader, that 'Brand' Nkabane was a lifetime in the making? A carefully curated blend of ambition, gloss and Instagrammable grace. But alas, what the ancestors giveth, live television taketh away. I cannot unsee that fatal moment: the Honourable Minister's jaws in motion, chewing bubble gum with the vigour of a teenager bunking maths class, right there in Parliament's sacred halls. I am still flabbergasted. No song, no victory dance Sadly, my leader, the people of South Africa aren't exactly ululating in praise. No victory songs are being sung in taverns or taxi ranks. They murmur that you did not act with the urgency that the moment required. Clearly, they don't know you; Brand Matamela! Let's talk about Andrew Whitfield of the Democratic Alliance (DA), shall we? You took four full moons – yes, four – to remove him from the position of deputy minister of trade, industry and competition after he went AWOL overseas, armed with nothing but a passport and without your presidential blessing. That's right; there was no leave, no permission, just right-wing vibes. And yet, you dithered like a man trying to remember where he last saw his iPad. Seta saga But when it comes to former minister Dr Nobuhle Nkabane – a whole black woman with a hard-earned doctorate – you moved her faster than a Gupta jet fleeing from Air Force Base Waterkloof en route to Dubai. Why the haste, Matamela? What did she do that was so egregious? They say her great crime occurred last month when her panel, appointed to oversee the selection of 21 chairpersons and board members for the Sector Education and Training Authority (Seta) boards, wobbled under relentless public scrutiny. And yes, the 'panel' disappeared quicker than bubble gum dissolving under parliamentary questioning. But really, was that her fault? All she did was remain on brand: deploy cadres and flood the state with African National Congress (ANC) acolytes. In that regard, she followed the sacred text. Just like the Gauteng Department of Health, which has transformed hospital boards into halfway houses for ANC Youth League (ANCYL) 'leaders' with the so-called requisite experience – which, in plain British English, means they once handed out flyers at a branch general meeting four years ago. Whitfield, who? My leader, I hadn't heard of former deputy minister Whitfield before you pulled the trigger. I had to Google the poor chap to ensure he wasn't a backup flyhalf for the Stormers. But Nkabane, now she caught my attention. Not her policies, her speeches, but her honourable reference to Brand Nobuhle Pamela Nkabane after the sirens muted and the blue lights dimmed. I must admit that line stuck with me. It turns out she worked hard for her 'Brand'. A brand built, not on competence or clean governance, but on chewing gum, cadre deployment and curated photo ops. But hey, that is the core of the ANC Brand, right? At least, my President, there's a little cheer in the room. The DA applauded your axing of Dr Nkabane and hastily announced their support for your 2025/26 Budget proposals. What a relief, neh? Baas John Steenhuisen finally gave you the thumbs-up – for now. Perhaps this is what it takes: sacrifice a gum-chewing comrade on the altar of fiscal stability, voilà, and Budget passed. While you're at it, my leader, please send more moola to Tembisa Hospital. It appears comrades there need urgent funds, not for scalpels or syringes, mind you, but for legal fees. Word on the street is some need money for protection from the 28s in prison. Kubi. Theatre of the absurd But what truly baffles me, Comrade Leadership, is the theatre of the absurd now playing out in Parliament's far-left corner – the uMkhonto Wesizwe party caucus. His Worship – sorry, my bad, he now prefers the minimalist title, Dr Mandlakayise John Hlophe – is lobbing fireballs from the backbenches. He's throwing everything but the Nkandla kitchen sink, demanding your removal as if you'd misplaced your oath of office behind the Phala Phala wildlife sofa. And why? Because you had the gall to discipline a minister who got caught being clumsy. I mean, how dare Nkabane get caught? The problem was never the panel; it's that she failed to make it disappear properly. Meanwhile, Honourable Hlophe, a man well versed in being removed, has resurfaced with fury. He wants to know why you haven't also thrown the 'on-leave' minister of police, Senzo Mchunu, to the wolves. He said axing Minister Nkabane was nothing more than appeasing your favourite fiscal gatekeeper, DA leader Baas John Steenhuisen. Is this what we've become, Matamela? A democracy of musical chairs? You remove me, I remove you, and then we all fall. A festival of removals, funded by taxpayers and staged in press briefings and parliamentary plenaries? The poisoned chalice My leader, tell me – did another black woman with a doctorate sip from the poisoned chalice this week? Or shall we say, benefit from it? Was she not mentioned in the great Seta Saga not too long ago? The optics, Matamela, are terrible – like fishnet stockings at a funeral. You removed a black woman, Minister Dr Nobuhle Nkabane, ostensibly for deploying ANC acolytes to the Seta boards. Yet, you turned around, straight-faced, and did the same, just with different comrades and newer name tags. Of sins, PhDs and Buti Manamela And the real kicker? You replaced a woman who had curated an entire political 'brand' with a man with a funny name, Buti Manamela, a wannabe communist. If his ancestors wanted him to be minister, they could have given him a better name, like Manamela Manamela. See, it got groove. But not just any man – a black man, yes – but then you tossed in Nomusa Dube-Ncube, a doctorate-wielding woman, red regalia and all, into the role of Deputy Minister. Are you for real, Matamela? A whole PhD holder who reports to a minister, who answers to a Cabinet, that you only occasionally control? What is this? A Game of Thrones spinoff sponsored by National Treasury and shot in downtown Johannesburg? You axed one for alleged sins and rewarded another despite the same allegations clinging to their robes like stubborn chewing gum. So, who's fooling whom here, Comrade Leadership? Murder scene mentorships Honestly, my leader, you've had a far better week than the self-styled Sushi King, Patriotic Alliance deputy president Kenny Kunene. The former prisoner turned 'businessman' turned politician found himself – wait for it – not in the Johannesburg Council Chamber, not on a panel, but at the plush Sandton residence of one Katiso 'KT' Molefe, the alleged mastermind behind the murder of DJ Sumbody, real name Oupa Sefoka. The timing couldn't have been better: as Kunene arrived, the police swooped in to rearrest Molefe. Netflix dreams and empires Now, you'd think most public figures would have the good sense to socially distance themselves from murder suspects. But not Comrade Kunene. No, he embarked on an unbothered, unrepentant media tour, armed with a bold story that deserves a Netflix deal. According to him, he was accompanying a young journalist – a prodigy, no less – who's set to inherit his entire publishing empire, African News Global. This bright-eyed scribe, we are told, needed to interview Molefe, who, by the way, is awaiting trial in another murder case. The goal? To give 'Mr Sandton Businessman' a fair chance to respond to the allegations. I must confess: I, too, hope to have a mentor like Kenny Kunene one day. A man of means, morals and murder-scene meet-and-greets. A comrade who will hold my hand as I interview alleged killers. How tender. Not my chommie And to be clear, Kunene doesn't know Molefe. They're not friends, not associates, not comrades. Sound familiar? Just strangers in a lounge where the bloodstains are still fresh in the air. Nothing to see here, folks. Aah Leadership, July is the longest year since the Gregorian calendar was invented. Till next week, my man. Send me to Sandton to interview a murder suspect. DM

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store