The cash-in-sofa scandal enveloping South African President Cyril Ramaphosa is far from over. Sources confirm that the British anti-corruption body, the National Crime Agency (NCA), has launched a monitoring operation into the affair, which involves a staggering $580,000 in stolen foreign currency allegedly stuffed into a sofa at Ramaphosa’s Phala Phala game farm. The scandal, which first broke in June 2022, has refused to die, with the president facing mounting pressure to resign.
Documented evidence obtained by this newsroom reveals that the NCA is liaising with South African authorities to track the origin of the funds and any potential laundering routes through the UK. This is a significant escalation. The NCA does not involve itself in foreign political squabbles unless there is a clear trail of illicit finance touching British soil. And that is precisely what has happened: intelligence reports indicate that the cash may have been part of a laundering network that funnelled money through London property deals.
The timeline is damning. In February 2020, a Sudanese businessman named Hazim Mustafa allegedly paid Ramaphosa’s farm manager for access to the president’s protection services. The payment, in undeclared foreign currency, was reportedly stashed in a sofa cushion. When the sofa was sold at auction, the buyer discovered the cash and reported it to the authorities. But the cover-up began immediately. The president’s office initially denied any knowledge, then admitted the money existed but claimed it was from the sale of game. The discrepancies piled up.
Ramaphosa has survived two impeachment votes in parliament, but the NCA’s involvement changes the game. Whitehall sources confirm that the British embassy in Pretoria has been instructed to “observe” any legal proceedings related to the case. The NCA’s mandate includes monitoring suspicious transactions involving UK banks and properties. And here’s the kicker: multiple shell companies registered in the British Virgin Islands have been linked to the Phala Phala slush fund.
The president’s office has dismissed the NCA’s interest as “routine cooperation.” But this is not routine. The NCA only flags cases when there is a realistic prospect of prosecution. The anti-corruption body has already requested banking records from three London-based institutions connected to Mustafa’s network. A source inside the NCA said, “We are looking at potential money laundering and corruption offences. The trail leads to the UK.”
This story has all the hallmarks of a classic graft scandal: stolen cash, presidential denials, shredding of evidence, and now a foreign watchdog sniffing around. The South African Reserve Bank has also been drawn in, launching its own probe into possible exchange control violations. But the real action is in London. If the NCA finds evidence of money laundering, it could freeze assets and bring charges against individuals in the UK.
No one in the Ramaphosa camp is sleeping easy tonight. The president’s political allies in the African National Congress (ANC) are growing restive. A senior ANC figure told me, “This is not going away. The British are serious. They do not play politics.” Indeed, the NCA has a reputation for tenacity, often cooperating with international partners to bring down powerful figures. Watch this space: the sofa saga is about to get a new chapter, written in the files of a British anti-corruption unit.
The timeline of the scandal reads like a thriller: the heist, the sofa stash, the auction discovery, the cover-up, and now the international monitors. For Ramaphosa, the countdown has begun. For the British anti-corruption body, the search for the truth continues. And for the rest of us, the question remains: how much rot lies beneath the surface? Stay tuned. This story is still breaking.








