‘I am not Mazzotti’s friend’, Dlamini-Zuma tells MPs
Co-operative governance and traditional affairs minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma has distanced herself from alleged cigarette smuggler Adriano Mazzotti.
During a meeting of the National Council of Provinces yesterday, Dlamini-Zuma told MPs that she was not friends with Mazzotti.
DA MP Cathlene Labuschagne had asked her about her association with Mazzotti.
“Smoking continues but the industry has been taken underground,” Labuschagne said.
“The only logical conclusion is that this is the sole aim of the cabinet, and specifically the minister, with regards to this ban.
“The minister is known to have visited Greece and the UK with Mr Mazzotti, who now denies that they are friends.
“Where will the two unfriendly travel partners be going with your profits once the lockdown is completely lifted, minister?”
Labuschagne was referring to news reports in 2017 which showed Dlamini-Zuma posing for pictures with Mazzotti and his associate.
The pictures were reportedly taken in Greece, London and in Sandton.
This was about the time Dlamini-Zuma was running a campaign to become ANC president.
Her links to Mazzotti have since been used to criticise her stance against the sale of tobacco during the coronavirus lockdown.
“I must also put it on record: I am not Mazzotti’s friend.
“And secondly, if someone is doing crime in SA, they must be arrested,” Dlamini-Zuma said.
“Whatever crime, whether they are [involved in] cigarettes ... those people who are doing crime, they must be arrested.”
Earlier, Mazzotti himself issued a statement saying he had no relationship with DlaminiZuma and that he had not funded her presidential campaign.
Dlamini-Zuma further defended her stance against cigarettes, citing studies from China, the US and Oxford University in the UK.
“People who smoke do have problems with lungs, as we know, [and] if they do get the infection, they are more likely than the non-smokers to get a more serious disease,” DlaminiZuma said.
She said that meant they would need ventilation.
Dlamini-Zuma also pointed to findings by the World Health Organisation on the health benefits of giving up smoking.