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Deputy ministers are appointed by the president of South Africa. They are not members of the cabinet. They assist cabinet ministers in the execution of their duties. The current deputy ministers are listed in the table below. The original group of deputy ministers officially took office upon their swearing-in on 3 July 2024. [22]
The minister of women, youth and persons with disabilities is the minister of the South African government with political responsibility for South Africa's Department of Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities. Between 2014 and 2024, the ministry was located in the Presidency, making its holders ministers in the presidency.
Minister Term President Citation Zola Skweyiya: 1994 1999 Mandela [1] Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi: 1999 2008 Mbeki [2] Mbeki [3] Richard Baloyi: 2008 2011 Motlanthe [4] Zuma [5] Roy Padayachie: 2011 2012 [6] Lindiwe Sisulu: 2012 2014 [7] Collins Chabane: 2014 2015 Zuma [8] Ngoako Ramatlhodi: 2015 2017 [9] Faith Muthambi: 2017 2018 [10] Ayanda ...
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) -South Africa's former president Jacob Zuma is barred from running for parliament in this month's election, the country's top court ruled on Monday, a judgment that could ...
Former South African President Jacob Zuma is facing an attempt to oust him from leadership positions in his new party, state broadcaster SABC reported on Tuesday, three weeks before an election in ...
In 1995, Joe Nhlanhla became deputy minister of justice with responsibility for intelligence affairs. When Jacob Zuma was elected president in 2009 he renamed the post to Minister of State Security, but kept Siyabonga Cwele in the job. After the ANC election win in May 2014, Jacob Zuma announced the new minister of state security as David ...
Former South African President Jacob Zuma Saturday lamented the high levels of poverty among black South Africans and promised to create jobs and tackle crime as he launched his new political ...
A South African general election was held on 29 May 2024 to elect the 28th Parliament of South Africa. [1] [2] Support for the incumbent governing party, the African National Congress (ANC), significantly declined in the election; the ANC remained the largest party but lost its majority in the National Assembly for the first time since the inaugural post-apartheid election in 1994. [3]