 South African President Siru Ramaphosa said that the governing party could and should have done more to prevent corruption under his predecessor Jacob Zuma in highly anticipated testimony to a graft inquiry. Ramaphosa, Zuma's former deputy, was appearing in his capacity as current leader of the African National Congress in a rare case of a sit-in president giving evidence on recent alleged acts of wrongdoing by members of his own party. Zuma and the Egyptas have consistently denied the allegations against them. I acknowledge that the issue of state capture was a matter of great political contestation within the ANC. Differences over whether indeed state capture existed, its extent and form and what should be done about it contributed to divisions within the National Executive Committee and other ANC structures. When you look at what other countries also do, some of them go through similar processes and it is worth mentioning that one of the earliest claims made within ANC structures of the possibility that members of the Egyptas family may have had an improper role in the functioning of the executive. We want to know, as people of South Africa, how did we reach here? Why the country is in this state today? The ANC must explain. They must call other people. I don't want to mention them, but all of them, they must come here. They were in government. We are unemployed now. We are suffering. We are dying. We are starving because of this. There are no feeding scheme. The COVID-19 relief fund has been booted all over and they are now denying us with their job. The president, Mr. Ramaphosa, is a part and parcel of this thing. He was president, rather deputy president of ANC. He was deputy president of the country. When all these things happened, when money disappeared, he was part and parcel of the same thing. He may say that he did not know, but then it is not correct. It is by example that no one is above this commission. When the commission wants to hear from you, definitely you have to avail yourself. And I think the president is doing the right thing to represent the African National Congress today. And don't forget to hit the notification button so you get notified about fresh news updates.