According to the Section 89 independent panel report, President Cyril Ramaphosa has an impeachment case to answer over serious violations of the Constitution.
Even if you don’t care one iota about politics in this country, and I envy you on that front, the events of the past 48 hours or so are worth a closer look.
For the best part of 15 years, Zapiro and Jacob Zuma have been locking horns and long may it continue.
Zapiro has had plenty of practice when it comes to mocking Eskom and our government. This time around, he’s looking at Gwede Mantashe, our Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy.
The battle over whether or not Zuma will return to prison to serve the remainder of his sentence rages on.
Following his infamous altercation with Ian Cameron from lobby group Action Society, which saw him shouting ‘shut up’ at the top of his lungs, the minister has carried on with his meaningless public appearances.
South Africans are rapidly redefining what ‘within walking distance’ means as the price of fuel continues to rise.
Minister Nathi Mthethwa and his department said the flag has “the potential to unite people” and in a roundabout way, that is totally correct.
With our national state of disaster once again extended, despite pleas from various experts for it to end, patience with President Ramaphosa is wearing thin.
Tony-Lee and Brandon-Lee Thulsie, known as the ‘terror twins’, have now pleaded guilty to various terrorism-related charges.
To be fair to Zapiro, it’s tough to talk about state capture without sounding a little despondent.
Shell is facing a public backlash with regards to its plans to carry out a seismic survey along the Wild Coast, and our political system enters a new cycle of dishonesty.
Yesterday, South Africa headed to the polls for our local elections. Perhaps I should say a small percentage of South Africans, to be more accurate.
The UK’s decision to keep South Africa on its ‘red list’ has been widely criticised, with Wits University vaccinologist Professor Shabir Madhi calling it “irrational”.
After what feels like decades of avoiding the repercussions of his crimes, it was entirely unsurprising when Zuma exited prison last week for medical reasons.
The Economic Freedom Fighters, or EFF, turned eight this week, with much noise and self-congratulating taking place on social media.
Zapiro and Zuma have done battle for years. As we enter another day wondering if the former president will end up behind bars, the cartoonist isn’t letting up.
A third COVID-19 wave, or “tsunami” as one doctor called it, is currently tearing through Gauteng. Zapiro has pointed out one obvious failure.
Our very own Department of Health, spearheaded by our very own Minister of Health, was helping people plunder funds in the midst of a deadly pandemic.
You can’t put a value on some of what we’ve lost to the latest blaze. As Zapiro points out, though, there are still many fires to put out.
South Africa’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout rate continues at an incredibly pedestrian speed, and patience is starting to wear thin.
With his Twitter account suspended, a second impeachment in the bag, and the clock ticking on his reign, things aren’t looking too rosy for POTUS.
Zapiro has had the knives out for Helen Zille for a while now, so you knew he was going to come hard at the recent elective congress results.
After Minister of Transport Fikile Mbalula’s juvenile Twitter rant on Monday, it was only a matter of time until Zapiro had a pop.
President Ramaphosa might be talking a good game after this weekend’s ANC meeting to tackle corruption, but Zapiro will take some convincing.
Whilst Zimbabweans continue to suffer at the hands of a brutal regime, President Ramaphosa talks of “recent reports of difficulties”.
The revered satirist has taken many potshots at the ruling party these past two decades, and he’s not about to let up now, either.
Anger over lockdown rules and regulations had already been stewing for weeks, but when it was announced that religious gatherings of up to 50 people would be allowed under alert level 3, it was the final straw for many.
Professor Glenda Gray’s comments about the national lockdown have come under fire from various government officials. Zapiro’s been watching closely.
There has been a massive surge in coronavirus experts, armed with their own sets of statistics to bolster their arguments.