The Jerusalem Post

Grace Mugabe returns to Zimbabwe after South Africa assault allegation

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HARARE (Reuters) – Zimbabwe’s first lady Grace Mugabe returned from South Africa early on Sunday, state media reported, after a 20-year-old model accused her of assault in an upmarket Johannesbu­rg hotel room.

South African police had placed border posts on “red alert” to prevent her from leaving the country, but the internatio­nal relations minister granted the wife of 93-year-old President Robert Mugabe diplomatic immunity.

“I hereby recognize the immunities and privileges of the First Lady of the Republic of Zimbabwe, Dr. Grace Mugabe,” said the minister, Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, in a notice published in South Africa’s Government Gazette on Sunday but signed on Saturday.

Zimbabwean state media reported that the president and first lady arrived in Harare aboard an Air Zimbabwe plane in the early hours of Sunday. A source confirmed this to Reuters.

The young woman who made the assault allegation, Gabriella Engels, has accused Grace Mugabe of whipping her with an electric extension cable a week ago as she waited with two friends in a luxury hotel suite to meet one of Mugabe’s adult sons.

President Mugabe attended a South African Developmen­t Community (SADC) summit in Pretoria on Saturday, but his 52-year-old wife was not there or part of his delegation.

Harare has made no official comment on the issue and requests for comment from Zimbabwean government officials have gone unanswered.

South Africa’s main opposition, the Democratic Alliance (DA), blamed the ministers of police, internatio­nal relations and defense for a failure to detain Grace Mugabe.

“The DA will be demanding an immediate parliament­ary inquiry into [the] government’s complicity in allowing Zimbabwean First Lady Grace Mugabe to flee the country in the dead of night to avoid criminal prosecutio­n,” John Steenhuise­n of the DA said in a statement.

Compoundin­g the awkward diplomatic situation, commercial flights between Zimbabwe and South Africa were grounded on Friday and Saturday, affecting both national carriers, after unexpected checks for operating permits.

 ?? (Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters) ?? PRESIDENT ROBERT MUGABE’S wife, Grace, addresses a rally of the ruling ZANU (PF) in Chinhoyi, Zimbabwe, last month.
(Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters) PRESIDENT ROBERT MUGABE’S wife, Grace, addresses a rally of the ruling ZANU (PF) in Chinhoyi, Zimbabwe, last month.

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