The Daily Telegraph

South African police ‘red alert’ to stop Grace Mugabe fleeing

- By Peter Granitz in Pretoria

SOUTH African police have issued a “red alert” to border posts to prevent Grace Mugabe, the first lady of Zimbabwe, from leaving the country amid claims she offered cash to her alleged victim to drop accusation­s of assault.

Gerrie Nel, the lawyer who is providing pro-bono representa­tion for Gabriella Engels, said yesterday that his client would launch a private prosecutio­n against Mrs Mugabe if South African police did not bring a case.

“From our point of view, we would expect at least a trial, or action within three months,” Mr Nel, who previously led the prosecutio­n of convicted murderer and blade runner Oscar Pistorius, said at a press conference in Pretoria.

He claimed that a private prosecutio­n could result in the “exact same sentences” as in a trial brought by the state. “Any sentence is possible. Also jail time.”

Mr Nel added that the family had rejected an offer, allegedly made via a third party, to drop the case in exchange for cash. Miss Engels, a 20-yearold model and nightclub hostess, has accused the Zimbabwean first lady of assaulting her with an extension cord at a Johannesbu­rg hotel where Mrs Mugabe’s sons rent flats.

The alleged assault on Sunday night spiralled into a diplomatic and political scandal earlier this week after police accused Mrs Mugabe of failing to honour an agreement to hand herself in for questionin­g.

Instead she appears to have taken refuge in a rented mansion in a Johannesbu­rg suburb and police have said she is seeking diplomatic immunity.

The case took a further twist yesterday when Miss Engels’s family announced they had accepted pro-bono legal assistance from Afriforum, a controvers­ial Afrikaner-rights group.

At a press conference announcing their intentions to bring suit, Mrs Engels sat silently, with a fresh bandage covering the wound she says was caused by Mugabe’s assault with the extension cord.

She refused to speak and stared forlornly at the table as her legal team answered questions for her.

Earlier Fikile Mbalula, South Africa’s Minister of Police, said all borders have been notified to prevent Mrs Mugabe from leaving the country before the matter is resolved. “The SAPS (South Africa Police Service) have already put

‘The police have already put tabs in the borders in relation to her leaving the country’

tabs in the borders in relation to her (Mrs Mugabe) leaving the country so there is no question about that.

“The red alert has been put [out],” Mr Mbalula told reporters.

However, a police spokesman later said no arrest warrant had been prepared and that they will wait for a decision about Mrs Mugabe’s applicatio­n for diplomatic immunity before taking a decision on further action.

Mrs Engels’s legal team dismissed the retroactiv­e request because, they said, Mrs Mugabe was in the country shopping and for medical reasons, but they conceded that it might well be granted.

The negotiatio­ns over diplomatic immunity are “most probably done at the highest levels of government,” said Willie Spies, an attorney affiliated with Afriforum, indicating that President Jacob Zuma and Robert Mugabe, the president of Zimbabwe, were handling the affair.

The moment diplomatic immunity is granted, Spies said, “she’ll probably leave the country.”

Mr Mugabe, 93, arrived in South Africa yesterday to attend a regional leaders’ summit in Pretoria.

Neither Mrs Mugabe nor the Zimbabwean government have commented on the case.

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 ??  ?? Robert Mugabe with his wife Grace, who is accused of failing to hand herself in for questionin­g over the assault claims
Robert Mugabe with his wife Grace, who is accused of failing to hand herself in for questionin­g over the assault claims
 ??  ?? Gabriella Engels, with a plaster over the wound she says was inflicted by Mrs Mugabe, arrives for a press conference yesterday
Gabriella Engels, with a plaster over the wound she says was inflicted by Mrs Mugabe, arrives for a press conference yesterday

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