Faith Muthambi


Azwihangwisi Faith Muthambi is the former Minister of Public Service and Administration and former Minister of Communications of South Africa.
Muthambi held a number of positions prior to her appointment to President Jacob Zuma's cabinet in 2014:
She was one of the seven ANC MPs who were nominated for the ad hoc committee to consider President Jacob Zuma‘s submissions on the public protector’s report on his Nkandla home.
Muthambi holds a B Proc from the University of Venda, and various other certifications and qualifications from UPTA, Wits Business School and UNIVEN.
An ad hoc Parliamentary committee found Muthambi "incompetent" and guilty of misleading parliament, which is a criminal offence. She also failed to attend a meeting where she was supposed to explain the R300,000 she spent on transport costs for friends and family to watch her deliver a speech.
. She has also failed to attend a meeting in order to account for her personal staff of 27, when the ministerial handbook limits this figure to 10.
As a result of the Public Protector’s findings of abuses of power, fraud and maladministration against Hlaudi Motsoeneng, the Western Cape High Court concluded that Muthambi had acted irrationally and unlawfully by appointing Motsoeneng as Chief Operating Officer of the SABC.

Treason and corruption charges 2017

In 2017 Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse laid charges of treason and corruption against Muthambi over claims that the then Minister of Communications deliberately shared three confidential Cabinet memoranda about executive policy and the scope of her ministerial powers through emails with Tony Gupta, Duduzane Zuma and Sahara’s CEO Ashu Chawla in July 2014. This was shortly after former president Jacob Zuma appointed her communications minister.

Criminal charges 2019

Following the release of the report of the commission of inquiry into editorial interference at the SABC in 2016, the Democratic Alliance opened a criminal case against Muthambi for misleading parliament, which is in direct contravention of the Powers, Privileges and Immunities of Parliament and Provincial Legislatures Act, which establishes the SABC as an independent institution.
The commission of inquiry found that Muthambi abused her power to get coverage of specific stories concerning her private interests, and interfered on several occasions in editorial decisions at the state broadcaster during her time as Communications Minister.
As a result Muthambi could be dismissed as a member of parliament.