Ramaphosa declared properties - presidency

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Johannesburg - The two Cape Town properties bought by Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa have been declared to Parliament and the Cabinet, the presidency said.

It was responding to a report in City Press which stated Ramaphosa's new luxury mansion will be built at the foot of Lion’s Head in Cape Town on a large stretch of prime land he bought for R30m.

Ramaphosa bought two steep mountain-side plots in upper Fresnaye in 2010, apparently to build his “retirement home”, a well-placed source told City Press.

On Sunday, presidency spokesperson Ronnie Mamoepa said in a statement it had noted the City Press report.

"The Presidency wishes to put it on record that two properties were acquired in 2010 through a loan secured against a different property under his family's Tshivhase Trust," he said.

"The ownership of the two Cape Town properties forms part of Deputy President Ramaphosa's financial declarations to Parliament and Cabinet. The Presidency raises its concern that an article of this nature could be published without seeking comment from the office of the Deputy President."

According to the report, the plots are registered to the Tshivhase Trust – Ramaphosa’s family trust – at the deeds office and have a combined size of 1 423m².

This means the deputy president forked out R21 000 per square meter just for the land, and excavation and building are bound to cost many more millions.

Ramaphosa is one of South Africa’s richest men, with a fortune estimated at R6.8bn by Bloomberg last month.

The plots are some of the last undeveloped tracts of land on sea-facing Head Road, which follows the contours of the mountain and is considered to be one of the country’s poshest streets.

At the building site last week, construction staff were hard at work excavating and clearing the site. They told City Press that the billionaire politician stopped by to personally inspect their handiwork just two weeks ago.

Ramaphosa was whisked up Fresnaye’s narrow streets in a two-car convoy and was accompanied by security guards when he got out for a chat with the crew at the building site.

“Yes, he was very friendly and, I mean, it’s a big honour to work for the Deputy President,” said one worker, speaking from behind the wheel of a monster excavation machine.

Workers have toiled there for the past two and a half months, balancing heavy machinery on a sheer precipice to blast granite from the mountainside in order to create a flat surface where the deputy president’s new house will be built.

They are nearly finished with that, and soon a new team will arrive to dig foundations for the house.

City Press caught a glimpse of the building plans for Ramaphosa’s villa, which will have a swimming pool and a deck with sweeping views of the Atlantic Ocean and Robben Island.

“Ja, the views are amazing. Just look at Robben Island,” said one observer. “On clear days, the Deputy President will be able to pinpoint Madiba’s very cell.”

Ramaphosa has a sizeable property portfolio, which includes a game farm near Bela-Bela in Limpopo and a mansion in the upmarket Johannesburg suburb of Hyde Park.

He also gets exclusive use of a secure, Victorian-style mansion in Pretoria as his official residence, but City Press understands that he prefers to stay in his home in Hyde Park when he is in Gauteng.

City Press also understands that the Fresnaye property is intended as a retirement home for Ramaphosa and his wife, Dr Tshepo Motsepe, who is mining magnate Patrice Motsepe’s sister.

However, his security detail may just wreak havoc along the narrow mountain streets.

Ramaphosa’s new neighbours do not appear to be short of cash either. At a villa next door, two Bentleys could be seen parked side by side in a glass-encased garage, and a Porsche drove by while City Press were there.

The Ramaphosas’ neighbours on Head Road will include US television and film producer Mark Gordon. Gordon, former president of the Producers’ Guild of America, filmed parts of the Warner Brothers fantasy flick 10 000 BC in Cape Town in 2006.

Just down the road, former Springbok coach Harry Viljoen sold his biscuit-coloured mansion – called Moondance – for R110m in 2013.

Adam Wakefield, News24

Source: http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/Ramaphosa-declared-properties-presidency-20150713
 
I was wondering who owed those plots on Head Road
 
Maybe he needs to declare where the money comes from and why do we pay him. That much?:sick:
 
Even the ANC deptuy president wants to live in a DA run city.
 
He made his money through his business ventures (Shanduka), not from his salary as deputy president.

Yes those that he wasn't suppose to have, those he was suppose to resign from. And those the got through Dodgy BEE deals.

He works for me. I say we pay him way to much, he has his hand in the cookie jar and should be fired.
But apparently the voters doesn't know that these idiots works for them not the other way around.

Disgusting. He is a public servant. He should have a house with his voters a rdp house, use state hospitals and his kids Gould only be allowed in state schools.
 
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Among other positions, he is executive chairman of Shanduka Group, a company he founded. Shanduka Group has investments in the Resources Sector, Energy Sector, Real Estate, Banking, Insurance, and Telecoms (SEACOM). He is also chairman of The Bidvest Group Limited, and MTN. His other non-executive directorships include Macsteel Holdings, Alexander Forbes and Standard Bank. In March 2007 he was appointed Non-Executive joint Chairman of Mondi, a leading international paper and packaging group, when the company demerged from Anglo American plc. In July 2013 he retired from the board of SABMiller plc.

He is one of South Africa’s richest men,[6] with Forbes estimating his wealth at $675 million.[7]

In his role as a businessman, Ramaphosa is a member of the Coca-Cola Company International Advisory Board as well as the Unilever Africa Advisory Council. He was also the first deputy chairman of the Commonwealth Business Council.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyril_Ramaphosa
 
He made his money through his business ventures (Shanduka), not from his salary as deputy president.

So how much was his business ventures worth before he "acquired" his large shares in MTN in 1994?

Was he worth R6.8 bil before that or was his billions just made because of politicking that gave him easy access to lucrative deals?

We all know what the answer is...he didn't help his people he helped himself instead.:sick:

And the people look up to people like him?Thats even more sick.
 
So how much was his business ventures worth before he "acquired" his large shares in MTN in 1994?

Was he worth R6.8 bil before that or was his billions just made because of politicking that gave him easy access to lucrative deals?

We all know what the answer is...he didn't help his people he helped himself instead.:sick:

And the people look up to people like him?Thats even more sick.

You forgot to mention Old MacDonalds - he owns that little farm as well...........

This is all small change for him - and once he becomes President, it will have to have at least 600 million in security upgrades since it falls in a DA held area.
 
Yes those that he wasn't suppose to have, those he was suppose to resign from. And those the got through Dodgy BEE deals.

He works for me. I say we pay him way to much, he has his hand in the cookie jar and should be fired.
But apparently the voters doesn't know that these idiots works for them not the other way around.

Disgusting. He is a public servant. He should have a house with his voters a rdp house, use state hospitals and his kids Gould only be allowed in state schools.

I know of another former public servant that lives in that neighberhood, FW De Klerk, never saw any questions how a career politician came to amass that sort of wealth. Also to have a wine farm in Paarl...

Say what you like about Ramaphosa and Sexwale, the sources of their wealth are well known, even though not particularly well liked. Others from the previous regime seem to have made a killing with little or no questions asked...
 
So how much was his business ventures worth before he "acquired" his large shares in MTN in 1994?

Was he worth R6.8 bil before that or was his billions just made because of politicking that gave him easy access to lucrative deals?

We all know what the answer is...he didn't help his people he helped himself instead.:sick:

And the people look up to people like him?Thats even more sick.
Not true, you just don't know about it.

Shanduka Black Umbrellas (SBU) works with partners in the private sector, government and civil society to address the low levels of entrepreneurship and high failure rate of 100% black-owned emerging businesses in South Africa. The initiative strives to develop 100% black owned businesses to a level where they can gain meaningful access to markets, finance and networks and facilitate access to these opportunities and in so doing promote entrepreneurship as a desirable career choice by building the profile of existing entrepreneurs as role models through our media, networking and public relations activities.

Shanduka Black Umbrellas nurtures qualifying 100% black-owned businesses in the critical first three years of their existence by providing incubators that have office infrastructure, professional services and a structured mentorship programme at a highly subsidised rate. Shanduka Black Umbrellas has incubators in Cape Town, Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban, Lephalale, Port Elizabeth, Richards Bay and Mooinooi in the North West.

The organisation also promotes procurement opportunities for 100% black-owned businesses through the Shanduka Blackpages enterprise and supplier development portal. This innovative online platform links procurement managers to 100% black owned companies and is a fast, cost effective and reliable solution for companies that want to bring black businesses into their supply chains. It also provides opportunities for small businesses to develop themselves through online training and access to various support services.

Cyril Ramaphosa Education Trust

The Cyril Ramaphosa Education Trust was established in 1996 to provide five bursaries each year to deserving students, enabling them to continue their studies in business related courses at any accredited South African tertiary institution. These students are given vacation work twice a year, where they have the opportunity to shadow Shanduka executives and professionals to acquire much-needed practical experience. There are currently 42 students on the programme. A bursary management offering has now been extended to other partner companies with the aim of managing and developing future successful graduates.

In March 2013, Kagiso Shanduka Trust (KST) together with the Free State Department of Education embarked on a project to support educational transformation in 428 schools in the Fezile Dabi and Motheo Districts.

With the Shanduka Foundation and Kagiso Trust each committing to R100 million towards the project, the Free State Department of Education matched this investment for a total project budget of R400 million.

Adopt-a-School Foundation

The Adopt-a-School Foundation fills an important gap in the provision of quality schooling. It mobilises companies and individuals to support the creation and enhancement of a conducive learning and teaching environment in disadvantaged schools. There are 629 schools currently under its adoption programme. Since inception it has built over 410 school facilities, creating over 7400 temporary jobs and benefiting over 805 small and medium-sized businesses.

Shanduka Group continues to provide strategic support to Adopt-a-School by providing funding, infrastructure, administration and guidance. Shanduka staff continue to make personal financial contributions on a monthly basis for the Olifantsvlei Primary School in Eikenhof, south of Johannesburg.

Shanduka Black Umbrellas Awarded Highest Accolade in International Business Incubation Awards

Shanduka Black Umbrellas (SBU) has been awarded the coveted Randall M. Whaley Incubator of the Year award by the National Business Incubation Association (NBIA). The NBIA, an international thought leader and global advocate for incubators and accelerators, honoured SBU with the accolade at the 29th National Business Incubation Association awards ceremony, held in Denver, Colorado (USA).

The 2015 awards saw Shanduka Back Umbrellas walk away with two prestigious awards. It was announced in March 2015 that SBU had been awarded the Dinah Adkins Incubator of the Year Award for a General and Special Focus Business Incubator. This award is aimed at incubators that serve a wide range of client types or serve clients in a nontechnology industry niche. The Dinah Adkins Incubator of the Year-Technology Focus award was given to Portland State University Business Accelerator.

Also check here for some of "his people" that he's helped.
 
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He made his money through his business ventures (Shanduka), not from his salary as deputy president.

BALLS.
His early bucks came off the backs of union members but everything else that he has came directly from the trough of loot that Mandela et al took over in 1994. He never earned a single cent of anything that he now owns.
 
I know of another former public servant that lives in that neighberhood, FW De Klerk, never saw any questions how a career politician came to amass that sort of wealth. Also to have a wine farm in Paarl...

Say what you like about Ramaphosa and Sexwale, the sources of their wealth are well known, even though not particularly well liked. Others from the previous regime seem to have made a killing with little or no questions asked...

Oh so because i was to young to complain about those I should shut up about this?
No.

They are raping the country and should be stopped. Just because it was done in apartheid doesn't mean it should be done 100 times worse now, rather disgusting that you think it's oke.
 
Moeletsi Mbeki explains the origin of the wealth nicely in his book, Architects of Poverty:

"The object of BEE was to co-opt leaders of the black resistance movement by literally buying them off with what looked like a transfer to them of massive assets at no cost."
 
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With further reference to my post 17 above about the political elite, it is also very interesting to note the ties between the biggest benefactors of the early BEE deals.

A lot of shares in Impala Platinum went to Bridgette Radebe's company. She is the wife of Jeff Radebe.

After the Impala deal, Anglo Platinum announced a similar deal with Bridgette’s brother, Patrice Motsepe, head of African Rainbow Minerals.

One very empowered family!

Bridgette is also the sister-in-law of Cyril Ramaphosa.
 
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