YOU (South Africa)

‘Tito and Gwede were my lovers’

Lerato Makgatho couldn’t believe her luck when two cabinet ministers fell for her. She tells YOU about her time with the powerful duo

- BY KHOSI BIYELA PICTURE: ER LOMBARD EXTRA SOURCES: CITY PRESS, RAPPORT, SUNDAY WORLD, CHANNEL24

EVER since she was a little girl, all she wanted was to be famous.

Lerato Makgatho’s dream came true and now her name is known all across South Africa – but not for the reasons she’d hoped. The actress and model-turned-slay queen – a slang term for a woman who wants to impress – is at the heart of an alleged love triangle involving two of the country’s most powerful politician­s – finance minister Tito Mboweni and mineral resources and energy minister Gwede Mantashe, who’s also the ANC’s national chairman.

Lerato (26), a one-time street child, made headlines recently when she revealed she’d been in relationsh­ips with both men.

She claims they treated her to holidays, meals at high-end restaurant­s and liaisons at top hotels, as well as a monthly “girlfriend allowance” of tens of thousands of rands.

“I have a house because of them. I have two cars because of their allowance,” she told City Press.

Mantashe (64) is married with three children, while Mboweni (60) is single.

Lerato is the mother of two children, both born before she met the powerhouse politician­s.

Now the slay queen has added author to her list of accomplish­ments, with the publicatio­n of her memoir, The Dark Side of Being a Slay Queen.

“Although I’m not even that much of a slay queen,” she claims.

“Women do all sorts of things for social media attention and likes. But what they don’t tell you is what happens behind the keyboard.”

It took her two years to write the book, “and yes, a few other famous names are going to come out,” she says.

She was “blessed” when the two ministers dropped into her lap in quick succession, first Mboweni in 2017 then Mantashe late last year.

“God is on my side!” Lerato says she thought when she realised the well-todo-looking Mantashe had focused his gaze on her – literally, as she was waiting for Mboweni at a restaurant at the five-star Sheraton Hotel near the Union Buildings in Pretoria. “It felt a bit like a jackpot.” Mantashe allegedly came up to her and asked, “What kind of bastard makes a beautiful woman like you wait?”

She says at the time she didn’t recognise the smooth talker as “Uncle Gweezy”.

“I just thought: ‘Sugar daddy and money . . .’”

IN 2015 Lerato shared the trauma of having survived a rape attempt when she was 16, writing in the “My Story” section of YOU’s sister magazine DRUM. “Poverty was my constant companion. It got to the point where I ended up begging for food and washing cars on the streets of Pretoria, so I could study and stay in school without worrying about not having schoolbook­s or a uniform,” she wrote.

Lerato was determined to become a model or an actress.

She won a beauty pageant when she was 16, and that was when she was approached by a “promoter”, who invited her to a photoshoot and then tried to rape her.

She fought him off and stabbed him with

a pair of scissors.

“I think I lost my mind for a bit because when I came to he was lying in a pool of blood and I was surrounded by the neighbours who’d called the police,” she wrote.

The man survived but Lerato and her family decided not to press charges. “We wanted to deal with it as a family.”

Lerato later signed with a casting agency and worked as an extra on popular soaps including Generation­s, Rhythm City and Muvhango, before landing roles in various reality TV shows and opening her own casting agency for extras, Bontle ka Botho.

But parts on TV weren’t enough for Lerato. She wanted to get rich and the way to do that, she decided, was with a blesser.

“I went on the internet and watched

‘I have a house because of them’

videos about how to attract men. It was really easy.”

Before she knew it, men were falling for her charms but not the one she desperatel­y desired.

“I wanted the president, but it wasn’t easy to reach him.”

AFACEBOOK post announcing Tito Mboweni’s birthday popped up in Lerato’s feed on 16 March 2017 and she didn’t waste time sending him a birthday message. She’d never met the former governor of the Reserve Bank but he sent her his cellphone number and they chatted on WhatsApp for about two weeks before meeting in person, she alleges. “He was a gentleman,” Lerato says. “He didn’t try to sleep with me or ask for nude pictures. He’s very old-fashioned.”

The year she was allegedly with him was “bliss”.

She claims he paid for her to have holidays around the country and took her for dinners at expensive restaurant­s. He also gave her a monthly allowance of R4 000, she says.

“He’d pay R1 500 just for dinner, and my heart would sink because that was what my mom would spend on groceries every month.”

As they grew closer, they spent less time at hotels and more time at his house in Killarney, she says.

“He even introduced me to his son one afternoon when we found him at the house.

“Things were getting serious,” she says. And yes, he introduced her to other people as his girlfriend, Lerato adds.

Tito had a conservati­ve side, she claims. He wanted her to clean up her social media profile, remove her bikini pictures, and stop wearing weaves “because he likes his women natural”. “He wanted to change me,” she says. When he was appointed finance minister in October 2018, their relationsh­ip began to fizzle out.

“He was always on the road. He didn’t have time for me anymore”.

She was waiting to meet Mboweni for lunch at the Sheraton Hotel in Pretoria when she was approached by a middle-aged man with a big belly.

“He asked what I was having and told the waiter to order [a glass of Moët & Chandon] and put it on his tab.”

“I didn’t know he was Gwede Mantashe. I just saw money. I saw someone who was going to bless me.”

They exchanged phone numbers and started chatting on WhatsApp.

She ended the relationsh­ip with the finance minister and focused her attention on Mantashe, who she describes as a level-one blesser.

He was giving her a monthly girlfriend allowance of R15 000, she claims.

Two months passed before she found out that Mantashe – “a tiger” in the bedroom, she alleges – was also a cabinet minister.

“I was like, ‘God, are you testing me?’ From one minister to another. I knew there and then that my life would never be the same,” she says.

She stopped seeing Mantashe after the story of their relationsh­ip broke in the media. “I still speak with Gwede,” she says. “He’s an easy-going guy, not fussy at all. He’s such a darling.”

Tito Mboweni and Gwede Mantashe were approached for comment but declined through their spokespeop­le.

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 ??  ?? Lerato Makgatho recently made headlines when it was revealed she’d allegedly had affairs with two cabinet members, finance minister Tito Mboweni (ABOVE LEFT) and mineral resources and energy minister Gwede Mantashe (ABOVE RIGHT).
Lerato Makgatho recently made headlines when it was revealed she’d allegedly had affairs with two cabinet members, finance minister Tito Mboweni (ABOVE LEFT) and mineral resources and energy minister Gwede Mantashe (ABOVE RIGHT).
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 ??  ?? Lerato is no stranger to the limelight. She’s worked as an extra on soapies such as Generation­s: The Legacy (LEFT) and Rhythm City (ABOVE), as well as appearing in various reality TV shows such as SABC1’s Big Up! (TOP).
Lerato is no stranger to the limelight. She’s worked as an extra on soapies such as Generation­s: The Legacy (LEFT) and Rhythm City (ABOVE), as well as appearing in various reality TV shows such as SABC1’s Big Up! (TOP).
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