Penuell Maduna
Penuell Mpapa Maduna is a South African politician and businessman. An anti-apartheid activist in his youth, Maduna was appointed to President Nelson Mandela's government in 1994. Thereafter he served as Minister of Mineral and Energy Affairs and, between 1999 and 2004, as Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development. Holding a doctorate of law from Unisa, he was also a long-time legal adviser to his party, the African National Congress, which he represented during the negotiations to end apartheid.
His term as Justice Minister, under President Thabo Mbeki, was blighted by controversy arising from prosecutorial investigations into Deputy President Jacob Zuma on corruption charges. Maduna resigned from politics in 2004 and is now a businessman.
Life and career
Early life
Born in Johannesburg on 29 December 1952, Maduna grew up in Rockville, Soweto. His mother and grandmother were both domestic workers, and the latter was a member of the African National Congress. While at the University of Zululand, he occupied leadership positions in the South African Students' Organisation, and he has cited Black Consciousness figures as influential for him during this period. He was detained and charged in the aftermath of the 1976 Soweto uprising, and, once released, spent the 1980s in exile with the ANC, which was banned inside South Africa at the time.Political career
Maduna's exile included spells in Maputo, Mozambique, where he lived with Albie Sachs; in New York; and at the ANC headquarters in Lusaka, Zambia. In Lusaka, he was a founding member of the ANC's Constitutional Committee, and he attended many of the ANC's early consultative meetings with white South African business and civil society representatives. After the ANC was unbanned in 1990, he became part of the ANC's delegation during the formal negotiations to end apartheid. In 1991, he was elected to the National Executive Committee of the ANC, and he was re-elected in that capacity until the 2007 Polokwane conference.When the ANC won South Africa's first democratic elections, he was appointed Deputy Minister of Home Affairs under President Nelson Mandela. In 1996, when the departure of the National Party from the transitional Government of National Unity occasioned a cabinet reshuffle, he was elevated to Ministry of Mineral and Energy Affairs. In 1999, newly elected President Thabo Mbeki appointed him Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development. He served in that office for a single term, resigning from the cabinet and from politics after the 2004 elections.