First Cabinet of Thabo Mbeki
2nd Cabinet of Republic of South Africa (since 1994 Democratic Elections) | |
1999 | |
Thabo Mbeki (2003) | |
Date formed | 18 June 1999 |
Date dissolved | 29 April 2004 |
People and organisations | |
Head of government | President Thabo Mbeki |
No. of ministers | 28 |
Status in legislature | Majority |
Opposition party | Democratic Party |
Opposition leader | Tony Leon |
History | |
Election(s) | 1999 |
Legislature term(s) | 4 years, 10 months and 11 days |
Predecessor | Mandela |
Successor | Mbeki II |
History
Following his election for a first term as President, Thabo Mbeki announced his Cabinet on 17 June 1999.[1]
This Cabinet was replaced on 29 April 2004 by Mbeki's second Cabinet.
Cabinet
Ministry / Portfolio | Minister / Incumbent |
---|---|
President of South Africa | Thabo Mbeki |
Deputy President of South Africa | Jacob Zuma |
Agriculture and Land Affairs | Thoko Didiza |
Arts and Culture | Ben Ngubane |
Communications | Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri |
Correctional Services | Ben Skosana |
Defence | Mosiuoa Lekota |
Education | Kader Asmal |
Environmental Affairs and Tourism | Valli Moosa |
Finance | Trevor Manuel |
Foreign Affairs | Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma |
Health | Manto Tshabalala-Msimang |
Home Affairs | Mangosuthu Buthelezi |
Housing | Sankie Mthembi-Mahanyele |
Intelligence Services | Joe Nhlanhla |
Justice and Constitutional Development | Penuel Maduna |
Labour | Membathisi Mdladlana |
Minerals and Energy | Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka |
Provincial and Local Government | Sydney Mufamadi |
Public Enterprises | Alex Erwin |
Public Service and Administration | Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi |
Public Works | Stella Sigcau |
Safety and Security | Steve Tshwete |
Science and Technology | Ben Ngubane |
Social Development | Zola Skweyiya |
Sport and Recreation | Ngconde Balfour |
The Presidency | Essop Pahad |
Trade and Industry | Alec Erwin |
Transport | Dullah Omar |
Water Affairs and Forestry | Ronnie Kasrils |
gollark: Even if it's technically possible to replace the parts - I don't really know the practicality of (un)soldering such things - it is much harder than with sane laptops which SATA ports.
gollark: So no ability to swap those.
gollark: The RAM and storage are soldered in in Apple laptops, no?
gollark: My old laptop had a 45W CPU and could keep hot chocolate pleasantly warm.
gollark: The M1 is quite neat, but it's also not very good that it's ridiculously integrated and impossible to upgrade/repair, as well as enforcing running only Apple software.
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.