First National Bank’s adverts calling for change in SA has been slammed by the ANC, with its youth league saying the campaign bordered on treason.
The Democratic Alliance has said Public Works Minister Thulas Nxesi must explain how R65-million was spent renovating ministers’ houses.
It is fashionable to blame politicians for a lack of ethics, but they are abetted by business
President Jacob Zuma’s inability to control his spending is not a new South African story; most citizens seem to be spending beyond their means.
The SAPS says the construction of a police station in President Jacob Zuma’s hometown of Nkandla is not linked to the upgrades to his home.
Mangosuthu Buthelezi believes the IFP’s by-election victory in President Jacob Zuma’s hometown of Nkandla is a significant milestone for the party.
The financing of the Nkandla project makes it clear that Jacob Zuma’s home is built on shaky foundations of friends and would-be favours.
The IFP has snatched a ward from the ANC in a by-election in Nkandla in KwaZulu-Natal, where President Jacob Zuma’s private home is based.
Media reports say taxpayers money has allegedly been used to pay for renovations to the homes of President Jacob Zuma’s two brothers.
Referencing the multi-million rand upgrade to the President’s homestead, the DA’s Mmusi Maimane has said that Mandela’s dream for SA is fading.
Nkandlagate is still in the news, Goma is captured by M23 rebels, there’s something fishy about a certain tv commercial and Gaga touches down in SA.
Some of the president’s private arrangements demand public scrutiny, because they pose real risks for him and for crucial areas of governance.
A piece of legislation dating from the apartheid security state stands in the way of the public finding out how much they are paying for Nkandla.
Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng has requested an answer on the urgency of debating a motion of no confidence in Jacob Zuma before December 7.
Reports say the SABC has banned a fast food commercial depicting President Jacob Zuma and his family having dinner in Nkandla.
As a collector of insults, Sarah Britten mulls over the importance of insults and the power play involved after the SACP’s call for an "insult law".
We will never win the war against the demon of corruption if it is true that President Jacob Zuma misled Parliament and the nation about his "bond".
An M&G investigation reveals that President Jacob Zuma was kept up to date about developments and taxpayer money was used for his private homes.
Nkandla isn’t the only Zuma family homestead. We round up some of the others and explain their surprising – and rather aggressive – names.
The country’s most extravagant presidency has overseen millions spent on an estate without a formal lease, writes Phillip de Wet.
Without Vivian Reddy’s provision of surety, FNB would not have granted a loan for President Jacob Zuma’s Nkandla property.
The M&G Centre for Investigative Journalism (amaBhungane) filed papers on Thursday
With President Jacob Zuma’s re-election to the ANC’s hot seat gaining momentum, observers have predicted a further decline in ANC support in 2014.
The ANC has called on the media to desist from "peddling malicious statements" on whether Jacob Zuma has a bond on his Nkandla home without proof.
‘Tis the season of giving and the Pimples follow the newly paved road to Zuma’s Nkandla housewarming party. Blade was not amused. Caution: Graphic content.
The Western Cape High Court will rule on Thursday whether Parliament should debate the motion of no confidence in President Jacob Zuma.
Jacob Zuma did have a bond on his Nkandla home – and may still be paying it off – but the details of the loan raise more questions than answers.
Court documents show that President Jacob Zuma received a (relatively small) home loan from First National Bank. But the bank says that is impossible.
The ANC has backtracked on a decision to block the no confidence vote tabled against President Jacob Zuma in Parliament.
Opposition parties on Sunday lashed out at President Jacob Zuma for "misleading" the Parliament about the bond he had on his house in Nkandla.
A newspaper report has revealed that the land on which Jacob Zuma’s home stands is owned by the Ingonyama Trust, headed by King Goodwill Zwelithini.
The battle for the truth about Nkandla is far more significant than the recent squabble between Helen Zille and a group of Zuma loyalists suggests.