Daily News

Reasons for Grace Mugabe’s diplomatic immunity in letter to Mbete

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SPEAKER Baleka Mbete received a letter from Internatio­nal Relations Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane setting out the reasons for granting diplomatic immunity to Zimbabwean First Lady Grace Mugabe, her office said yesterday.

The reasons given in the letter include “South Africa’s relations with our states in the region, in particular Zimbabwe, as well as the need to ensure a successful hosting of the SADC summit”.

Nkoana-Mashabane said: “I also had to consider internatio­nal law rules that provided for derivative immunity of spouses of heads of state.

“It was a difficult decision but one which, all things considered, had to be made.”

Parliament said the letter would be sent to all political parties and to the portfolio committee on Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation, which might decide to call the minister to discuss her decision.

Mugabe was granted diplomatic immunity last weekend after she allegedly severely beat a young South African model, Gabriella Engels, with an extension cord in a Sandton hotel.

She had accompanie­d President Robert Mugabe to a summit of the Southern African Developmen­t Community.

The decision created an outcry, with the DA calling for a parliament­ary inquiry into what it termed “government’s complicity in allowing Zimbabwe’s First Lady, Grace Mugabe, to flee the country in the dead of night to avoid criminal prosecutio­n”.

Mugabe had reportedly left the country by the time a notice indicating that she had been granted immunity was published in the government gazette.

The Department of Internatio­nal Relations said the minister had used a discretion given to her in Section 7(2) of the Diplomatic Immunities and Privileges Act.

It states that the minister could, in any particular case, confer immunities and privileges on a person or organisati­on if this was in the interests of South Africa.

A senior official in the department said, on Thursday, Parliament had no particular role in the matter and that it was considered closed.

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