The Mercury News Weekend

‘Red alert’ over Zimbabwe first lady, accused of assaulting young model

- By Krista Mahr

JOHANNESBU­RG » Lawyers for the young model who claims she was assaulted by Zimbabwe’s first lady Grace Mugabe in a Johannesbu­rg hotel said Thursday that her family had been approached with an offer of money to drop the allegation.

South African police issued a “red alert” to prevent Mugabe from leaving the country after Zimbabwe’s government requested diplomatic immunity.

Lawyers for 20-year- old Gabriella Engels threatened to go to court if South Africa’s government grants Mugabe immunity, saying it cannot be used to “escape prosecutio­n from grave crimes.”

The lawyers said Engels’ family had been approached with an offer of “financial compensati­on” by a third party, which Engels refused. “They made an offer and said ‘Let us talk, this will go away.’ ... There was no amount men- tioned,” said Gerrie Nel, a prominent South African lawyer who has offered his assistance to Engels.

In a letter sent Thursday to the South African government, Willie Spies, another lawyer involved in the case, said the offer was made Tuesday and suggested that Engels should “come up with a figure so that parties could meet in order to settle the matter quietly.”

The scandal has become a diplomatic mess for South Africa’s government and Zimbabwe’s 93-year-old President Robert Mugabe, who arrived in South Africa’s capital late Wednesday apparently to deal with the crisis. He came early for a regional summit of southern African nations this weekend.

South Africa’s minister of police, Fikile Mbalula, said all borders had been notified to prevent Grace Mugabe from leaving the country be- fore the matter is resolved, the African News Agency reported. “The red alert has been put,” Mbalula told reporters.

South African authoritie­s are debating whether to grant the 52-year- old Mugabe diplomatic immunity.

Engels has registered a case with police accusing Mugabe of attacking her with an extension cord in a luxury hotel in a Johannesbu­rg suburb late Sunday. Engels said she was in a hotel room with mutual friends of Mugabe’s two sons, who live in Johannesbu­rg, when the first lady burst in and assaulted her. Photos of Engels posted on social media show a bloody gash to her forehead that she claimed was a result of the encounter.

Police said they’ve completed their investigat­ion into the case and are waiting for direction from South Africa’s government on the status of Mugabe’s immunity request.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gabriella Engels, right, and her mother, Debbie Engels during a media conference in Pretoria, South Africa, on Thursday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gabriella Engels, right, and her mother, Debbie Engels during a media conference in Pretoria, South Africa, on Thursday.

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