South Africa’s finance minister, Nhlanhla Nene has asked president Cyril Ramaphosa to sack him, following repeated calls for him to step down on account of his admission to have met the Gupta brothers at their Saxonwold home between 2010 and 2013. The Business Day newspaper reported on Monday that Nene asked Ramaphosa, who appointed him finance minister last year, to relieve him of his duties over the weekend.
“Government sources said Nene approached Ramaphosa after the highly negative public reaction to his apology to South Africans on Friday for the meetings with the Gupta family when he served under Zuma,” the South African newspaper said. Nene had on Friday apologized to South Africans for meeting the controversial Gupta brothers at their home, rather than in his office.
Nene’s disclosure of the meetings during his testimony to the inquiry into allegations of corruption by the Guptas has fueled fierce debate in South Africa.
The Guptas have been severally accused by different government officials and activists of using their friendship with former president Jacob Zuma, to enrich themselves in what has since come to be known as ‘state-capture’.