Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 10 December 2025
📘 Source: Business Day

President Cyril Ramaphosa has discretionary power to suspend orplace a minister on leavealthough it is not an express power in the constitution, a full sitting of the high court in Pretoria has found in dismissing former president Jacob Zuma’s case against his successor. Zuma’s third try in court to set aside Ramaphosa’s decision to place Senzo Mchunu on leave fell flat when the matter was decided on its merits by judges Letty Molopa-Sethosa, Graham Moshoana and Etienne Labuschagne. Zuma and the MK party took Ramaphosa to court to overturn the decision to place the police minister on special leave and appoint Firoz Cachalia.

Ramaphosa made the decisions in July in the wake of damning allegations by KwaZulu-Natal commissioner Lt-Gen Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi alleging the justice cluster was infiltrated by sophisticated criminal syndicates. Zuma and MK argued there is no legal provision that empowers Ramaphosa to place Mchunu on leave and the president should have fired the minister instead. “To dismiss minister Mchunu outright based on untested allegations could be assailed as irrational,” reads the full bench judgment, which was delivered on Tuesday.

“There must be a power to protect the public confidence in the executive and to investigate whether there are grounds for dismissal. A power to suspend, as a precursor to a decision to dismiss or not, in terms of section 91(2) is available under the third power contemplated in section 84(1), ie implied as necessary for the president to exercise his powers to appoint or dismiss ministers.” The implied power was pinned on a section of the constitution that empowers the president to appoint ministers, assign their powers and functions, and dismiss them. The full bench found suspending a minister is reasonably necessary when it is not apparent whether the facts warrant dismissal.

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“The appointment of the Madlanga commission as a step in answering this question indicates that it was a reasonably necessary requirement to appoint the commission to enable the president to, in due course, exercise his constitutional powers. “It is clear that the constitution does not provide the president an express power to place a minister on leave or even precautionary suspension. Properly interpreted, sections 91(2) and 98 yield the implied power to place minister Mchunu on either suspension or leave of absence.” Zuma and MK, represented by Dali Mpofu, also sought to overturn the establishment of the commission chaired by retired justice Mbuyiseli Madlanga on the basis that members of the judiciary were implicated by Mkhwanazi.

Mpofu argued a judge cannot preside over the commission. The judgment reads: “The allegations are, however, not against the judiciary specifically but relate to specific instances. As long as the issues fall within the terms of reference of the commission, there is no impediment to an impartial judge presiding over the commission. “It is not correct to suggest that only the Judicial Service Commission is empowered to investigate allegations of impropriety of judges.

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📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by Business Day • December 10, 2025

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