...

Logo Pasino du Havre - Casino-Hôtel - Spa
in partnership with
Logo Nextory

Trial of 3 accused in South Africa's 'farmgate' case gets underway

• Sep 16, 2025, 11:06 AM
5 min de lecture
1

Three people went on trial in South Africa on Monday after being charged with housebreaking and stealing $580,000 in U.S. banknotes hidden in a couch at a game farm owned by President Cyril Ramaphosa.

The strange case mired Ramaphosa in scandal and almost cost him his job after he was accused of tax evasion, money laundering and breaching foreign currency laws. He was also accused of trying to hide the existence of the money because the alleged theft happened in 2020, but was only revealed two years later.

The case has been dubbed “farmgate” in South Africa.

Ramaphosa, who campaigned on an anti-corruption ticket, was cleared of wrongdoing and survived a vote in Parliament over whether impeachment charges should be brought against him, but he is still under scrutiny over why such a large amount of money was stashed in a piece of furniture.

Cash in a couch

Ramaphosa has said the money came from the legitimate sale of animals at his Phala Phala game and livestock farm in the northern province of Limpopo, but hasn't explained why it was stashed in a couch.

The three defendants, two men and a woman who was a cleaner at the farm, are accused of breaking in and stealing the money in February 2020. They pleaded not guilty to the charges on the opening day of the trial on Monday.

FILE - South African President Cyril Ramaphosa is silhouetted as he addresses members of the defence forces, Richards Bay, South Africa, Feb. 21 2023
FILE - South African President Cyril Ramaphosa is silhouetted as he addresses members of the defence forces, Richards Bay, South Africa, Feb. 21 2023 Themba Hadebe/Copyright 2023 The AP. All rights reserved.

The spy boss

The case came to light when the former head of the state security agency walked into a police station in June 2022 and filed a complaint against Ramaphosa. The spy boss, Arthur Fraser, accused Ramaphosa of hiding $4 million in the couch and using his personal police security detail to track down the thieves and bribe them to keep quiet about the money.

Ramaphosa and authorities disputed the amount of $4 million. Fraser claimed to have provided the police with “supporting evidence” in the form of pictures, videos and bank account information linked to the alleged theft.

Fraser's role in the scandal also became a source of intrigue because he is an ally of former President Jacob Zuma, the man Ramaphosa succeeded as president and his fierce political rival. Zuma was forced to resign as president in 2018 because of corruption allegations and has been critical of Ramaphosa since.

The president's scandal

The case sent allegations of corruption against Ramaphosa swirling. While investigations by the police and the country’s financial authorities cleared him of wrongdoing, he still needed his party’s majority in Parliament to block a move to impeach him in December 2022.

Ramaphosa denied that he tried to hide the alleged theft from police and said he reported it to the head of his police protection unit.

Three years after the scandal first broke, the trial of the three suspects is expected to be closely watched for any role the president had in the affair. Ramaphosa was reelected for a second term last year, although only after his long-ruling African National Congress party lost its 30-year majority and had to form a coalition government.

The court case

The trial of defendants Imanuwela David, Ndilinasho Joseph and his sister Froliana Joseph has been delayed several times, including for Froliana Joseph to give birth. They are all charged with housebreaking, conspiracy to commit housebreaking and theft. David also faces money laundering charges.

Prosecutors expect the trial to run for three weeks and say they will call 20 witnesses, including staff members who worked at Ramaphosa's farm.


Today

Congress rejects Milei vetoes as thousands rally outside in Buenos Aires
• 11:51 AM
1 min
Thousands gathered outside Argentina’s Congress on Wednesday to celebrate lawmakers’ decision to overturn President Javier Milei’s vetoes of two bills funding public universities and paediatric hospitals.<div class="small-12 column text-center article__bu
Read the article
Ghana’s women struggle to save oyster farming hit by climate change
• 11:41 AM
4 min
Mangroves, trees or shrubs that grow along coastlines serve a critical multifunctional purpose in the aquatic ecosystem, ranging from being a home to fish to providing a buffer for coastal erosion from rising sea levels, and protection to land during stor
Read the article
Deportees dispute Ghana’s claims of repatriation
• 11:34 AM
3 min
Human rights experts warn the deportations could put the migrants’ safety at risk, while raising broader questions about international protections for asylum-seekers<div class="small-12 column text-center article__button"><a href="https://www.africanews.c
Read the article
Togo: President's sister-in-law, a former defence minister, arrested
• 10:28 AM
1 min
Marguerite Gnakadè was a former defence minister and is the sister-in-law of president Faure Gnassingbé. She had repeatedly called for him to step down and end the family's regime over the past months.<div class="small-12 column text-center article__butto
Read the article
UN calls out South Sudan's 'reckless' charges against Machar
• 8:51 AM
3 min
South Sudan's First Vice President Machar faces charges of treason and other serious crimes, local justice authorities said, as fears grow that the east African country could edge toward a return to civil war.<div class="small-12 column text-center articl
Read the article
Gabon gears up for legislative and local elections as campaigns kick off
• 8:13 AM
1 min
Following Brice Oligui Nguema's victory on April 12, which marked a significant political shift after a coup toppled the long-standing regime of Ali Bongo, Gabon will hold legislative and local elections on September 27 and October 11.<div class="small-12
Read the article
Mali military escorts vehicles after militants attack fuel trucks
• 6:42 AM
1 min
Militants affiliated with al-Qaida have burned and destroyed some 100 trucks transporting fuel to Bamako in recent days, according to a local trade union<div class="small-12 column text-center article__button"><a href="https://www.africanews.com/2025/09/1
Read the article
ECOWAS chief makes surprise visit to Burkina Faso
• 5:28 AM
2 min
Sierra Leone's president Julius Maada Bio who took over the chairmanship of ECOWAS in June, met Tuesday with Burkina Faso’s junta leader Capt. Ibrahim Traoré at the presidential palace in Koulouba.<div class="small-12 column text-center article__button"><
Read the article
DRC: former President Joseph Kabila's trial verdict due this Friday
• 12:21 AM
2 min
In a significant development, the High Military Court in Kinshasa has set Friday for its verdict in the war crimes trial of former Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila.<div class="small-12 column text-center article__button"><a href="https
Read the article