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Image: OUTA
OUTA says Tolashe dismissal must mark wider accountability shift
Public confidence in government depends on consistent and credible accountability for ethical failures
- OUTA welcomes President Cyril Ramaphosa’s dismissal of Minister Sisisi Tolashe from Cabinet
- Serious allegations surrounding the misuse of public resources and questionable conduct required decisive action
- OUTA warns that accountability loses credibility when consequences appear inconsistent or politically timed
- Ethical leadership and visible accountability are essential to restoring trust in government institutions
The Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse (OUTA) has welcomed President Cyril Ramaphosa’s decision to dismiss Minister of Social Development, Sisisi Tolashe, from Cabinet.
OUTA says the decision was necessary and overdue in light of a series of serious allegations surrounding Minister Tolashe’s conduct, including claims relating to the misuse of public resources, questionable appointments, the alleged abuse of state-funded personnel, and the failure to disclose luxury vehicles reportedly linked to the ANC Women’s League and registered in the names of her children.
“South Africans are exhausted by accountability that appears selective, delayed or politically convenient,” says Wayne Duvenage, OUTA CEO. “The dismissal of Minister Tolashe is the correct decision, but the same standard must apply consistently across all areas of government.”
OUTA says the Department of Social Development is responsible for serving some of South Africa’s most vulnerable citizens and requires leadership that reflects the highest standards of integrity and ethical conduct.
“At a time when public trust in government institutions has already been severely damaged by repeated corruption scandals, governance failures, and abuse of public resources, visible accountability is critical to restoring credibility,” says Duvenage.
The organisation says allegations involving abuse of office, misuse of state resources, or undisclosed benefits cannot simply be managed politically.
“They require transparent investigation, decisive action, and meaningful consequences. Ethical leadership cannot only matter when public pressure becomes unbearable.”
“While OUTA acknowledges that investigations and due legal processes must continue, the organisation believes the President’s decision sends an important signal that accountability and consequences for misconduct cannot be treated as optional.”
OUTA urges the President to apply the same standard consistently across government, regardless of political position, factional alignment or public pressure.
Supporting Documents
- A voice note from Wayne Duvenage, OUTA's CEO can be found here in English.

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