The ANC will call on President Jacob Zuma to answer questions on the Nkandla report if necessary, says secretary general Gwede Mantashe.
Government ministers have denied there was any political pressure placed on the public protector in the run-up to the release of the Nkandla report.
Government, at face value, appears to have accepted Thuli Madonsela’s findings at Nkandla. But it insists all upgrades were necessary for security.
The presidency has issued a statement saying Jacob Zuma will respond to Thuli Madonsela’s report on the Nkandla upgrades once he has studied it.
In her report on President Zuma’s homestead, Thuli Madonsela has documented a damning trail of maladministration by state ministers and officials.
The public protector’s report has found that Jacob Zuma disproportionately benefited from the upgrades made to his home by an estimated R246-million.
The warning to journalists not to photograph the site was a particularly low point in the charade.
Sleight of hand doesn’t serve a clumsy conjuror well: the state’s sleeves have run out of tricks.
Hardliners in the party meet to strategise how to rubbish public protector Thuli Madonsela’s report on Nkandla.
Officials and even Cabinet ministers broke the rules to please Number One.
Zuma did not mean to mislead Parliament but his conduct remains "inconsistent with his office".
Thuli Madonsela releases her final report into security upgrades at Jacob Zuma’s homestead at Nkandla. Here’s a rough guide of what to expect.
Excuses for ministers’ nonattendance at a summit hosted by the public protector reveal high levels of tension over the release of the Nkandla report.
Opposition parties will debate Jacob Zuma’s State of the Nation Address in Parliament this week, with jobs and Nkandla topping the agenda.
In a TV interview, Jacob Zuma has instisted he will not resign over the Nkandla scandal, saying SA does not know if he has done anything wrong.
The DA has filed an affidavit in its court battle to get access to the Nkandla report, says parliamentary leader Lindiwe Mazibuko.
Former police commissioner Bheki Cele wants documents and time to respond to allegations that he failed to stop wasteful expenditure at Nkandla.
The release date for the public protector’s final report on the upgrades to Jacob Zuma’s Nkandla homestead is expected to be announced next month.
2014 will be a heady news mashup with the trials of Julius Malema and Oscar Pistorius on the agenda, as well as Thuli Madonsela’s Nkandla report.
Thuli Madonsela says this year has been the toughest of her four years as Public Protector, according to a report.
Taking full responsibility for "the project", Minister Thulas Nxesi says Jacob Zuma had no knowledge of upgrades done to his Nkandla homestead.
The DA’s Lindiwe Mazibuko has called a task team report on the security upgrades at Jacob Zuma’s Nkandla homestead a "whitewash" and "cover-up".
From Nkandla’s rural setting to neighbours threatening the president’s safety, public works explains the security upgrade to Jacob Zuma’s homestead.
Our website visitors – more than 20-million for 2013 – relish a good tabloid read as much as they want politics. Here’s the big stories.
President Jacob Zuma’s Nkandla homestead builder Thandeka Nene is being held in the Seychelles for attempted fraud.
News analysis: The glaring differences between the two reports on Jacob Zuma’s Nkandla homestead cast doubt on the interministerial team’s work.
An opinion poll shows President Jacob Zuma is losing support over claims of self-enrichment.
The Mail & Guardian has put public protector Thuli Madonsela in danger, says one reader.
The Nkandla report allegedly clearing Jacob Zuma will be released next week Tuesday, it has been announced at a post-Cabinet briefing.
Thuli Madonsela has expressed disappointment in the media and the ANC over the provisional Nkandla report. And she is about to come in for a lot more.
The Mail & Guardian has put public protector Thuli Madonsela in danger, says one reader.
Jimmy Manyi questions whether the public should know what is in Madonsela’s provisional report. Julie Reid says the M&G had no choice but to publish.