Tuesday, 2 July 2013

SPECIAL REPORT: A closer look at Mamphela Ramphele’s Agang – on the road to power?

Several readers have been asking me about Mamphele Ramphela’s new political party Agang. So I thought I’d put together a special report this week. Thanks for the support guys and gals.

Mamphela Ramphele’s entry into South African politics after a long and distinguished career has certainly been a source for headlines since her new political party’s inception. Prior to its formation, many speculated that the Democratic Alliance leader, Helen Zille, was prepared to step down from her role to back Ramphele as a leader of a new party called the Democrats. Ramphele's new party is named Agang, after the Sesotho phrase meaning “let us build”, and Ramphele asserted that it would be a direct challenge to the current ruling African National Congress.

Agang started out with Ramphele and a small team, including co-founder Moeletsi Mbeki; chief of staff Zohra Dawood; policy director Mills Soko; spokesperson John Allen; and the party’s Canadian chief of staff, Tim Knapp. A top banker and former BP and Chevron executive, Nkosinathi Solomon, was recently appointed as Agang’s campaign director. Research has also shown that some of these five (Tim Knapp, Moetletsi Mbeki, Mills Soko and Mamphela Ramphele) are directors at a company that is considered to be the legal entity behind Agang, a Johannesburg-registered company called Great Potential for South Africa.

Now to the murky question of the party’s political funding…

Despite Ramphele’s insistence to the media that she has not requested international assistance, former DA leader and ambassador to Argentina, Tony Leon, told City Press recently that he knew that Ramphele had staged at least two recent meetings in the US to fund-raise for the party. One of these meetings was most certainly at the residence of the South African-born former Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, Margaret Marshall and her husband, a former New York Times journalist. Ramphele is said to have stated she was there to raise money for Agang and that she will continue to request support from South Africans all over the world so that they can be part of the building process.

My research has shown that various American businessmen have made significant contributions to the party, most notably the Hungarian-US billionaire George Soros. Soros has reportedly donated several million US dollars through his Open Society Foundation. Ramphele has close links to both Soros and the Open Society Foundation, having co-founded its South African arm with him in 1993 and she remains a director at the Open Society Foundation of South Africa to this day. Soros has also been able to support in other ways, such as in secondment of employees from the Open Society to Agang.

Ramphele’s closeness to former World Bank general counsel and senior vice president Roberto Dañino could also hint at funding from abroad; Ramphele and Dañino met at their time together at the World Bank and were also together at gold miner Gold Fields. They reportedly remain in close contact and Dañino is known to stay at Ramphele’s Camps Bay home when he visits Cape Town. Given Dañino’s business connections in the USA, it seems that Soros is not Ramphele’s exclusive source of foreign funding…

It is also worth adding that Ramphele is also a trustee at The Rockefeller Foundation. Did she go knocking at David’s door too?

Original articles:



I welcome requests for other special reports.

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