Sunday Times

Minister’s mystery trip: angry father hits back

Woman smuggled into SA on air force jet was in a relationsh­ip with Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula’s son

- MZILIKAZI wa AFRIKA

DEFENCE Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula’s late son was romantical­ly involved with the Burundian woman she smuggled into South Africa on an air force jet, sources said this week, and the couple had plans to marry.

Michelle Wege, 22, who the minister claimed to have rescued from an abusive father, was planning to marry Chumani, who was stabbed to death, allegedly by his friend Carlos Higuera, in Bezuidenho­ut Valley, Johannesbu­rg, in October last year.

Businessma­n Laurent Wege, who made the startling claim this week, also lifted the lid on a business relationsh­ip with the minister gone sour, and denied Mapisa-Nqakula’s claims that she had “rescued” Michelle from being abused by him.

The father’s claims about the real reasons for Mapisa-Nqakula’s extraordin­ary actions contradict those she gave the Sunday Times last week.

Michelle flew to South Africa on Mapisa-Nqakula’s state jet in January 2014 after being arrested in Kinshasa, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, for trying to board a plane to South Africa on a false passport.

Mapisa-Nqakula claimed she had come to Michelle’s aid because she was being abused by her father, and because she was good friends with her children.

She said she had been en route to a meeting in Addis Ababa and had made a scheduled stop in Kinshasa to meet with officials.

She denied she had flown there specifical­ly to fetch Michelle.

But Michelle’s father told a very different story this week.

“Michelle confirmed to me that she was engaged to the minister's late son. And I confronted the minister about her secret marriage arrangemen­ts for my daughter to her son,” Wege said.

Wege’s claims that his daughter was in a romantic relationsh­ip with Mapisa-Nqakula’s late son are supported by four other sources, two of them close to the minister’s family.

Three sources close to MapisaNqak­ula’s family made similar allegation­s to the Sunday Times last week.

“We all know that the girl came to live with the minister because she was dating her son,” a source said.

“I have it on good authority that the minister was concerned about Michelle when she was arrested in the DRC because she was dating her son,” another source said.

And the last source said it was common knowledge in MapisaNqak­ula’s home that Michelle and Chumani were in a relationsh­ip.

Mapisa-Nqakula this week refused to answer 10 questions sent to her by the Sunday Times, but a spokesman claimed that “the story is a well calculated plan to destroy her reputation”.

An e-mail from the minister’s office to the Sunday Times yesterday said the story “is a political plot directed at the minister . . . we know who the conspirato­rs are and know that you were chosen carefully to assist them in their plot”.

The e-mail added that the Sunday Times was throwing the allegation that her son had been dating Michelle “into the mix, knowing that he’s no longer here to answer to it”. The minister failed to mention that Michelle, who lives in her house, is still alive and can answer for herself.

Wege told the Sunday Times that the minister had arranged with her sister, Nosithembe­le Mapisa, deputy ambassador to Burundi at the time, for his daughter to “run away” to the Congo, where she was arrested with fraudulent documents at Kinshasa Internatio­nal Airport as she was about to board a flight to South Africa.

Mapisa was suspended for her alleged role in assisting Michelle

The minister and her sister are using my daughter to blackmail me

source a fake passport, but was reinstated after more than a year, allegedly following political pressure.

Mapisa-Nqakula said last Sunday that she had rescued Michelle from the Congo, where she had been detained for about 10 days, to help her “escape abuse at the hands of her father”.

But Wege this week vehemently denied that he had abused his daughter. He said Mapisa-Nqakula had other “underlying motives” when she went to the Congo to negotiate his daughter’s release into her care.

“The minister chose not to contact the Burundian government, which she has relations with, but preferred to smuggle a Burundian national out of the DRC who was supposedly accused of possessing fraudulent Congolese documents,” he said.

“I came to South Africa twice while Michelle was with her and I stayed at the minister’s house. I lived with them in the house. They never brought up that issue.”

Wege said he had “a reciprocal business relationsh­ip” with MapisaNqak­ula and that he was “shocked and surprised” by the minister’s abuse accusation­s.

“When the proper time and the right moment come I will tell the truth about how the minister and her sister are using my daughter to blackmail me.

“The two Mapisa sisters are very manipulati­ve and will say and do anything to get what they want. They will twist the truth to make their wrongdoing­s seem right to get what they want.

“It is very disappoint­ing that such a powerful, influentia­l politician will use government resources and blackmail for personal gain and has

no remorse for her actions.”

Wege refused to explain the nature of his business relationsh­ip with Mapisa-Nqakula or how the minister and her sister were trying to blackmail him.

“I love my daughter dearly and have always worked hard to provide her with the best opportunit­ies.

“Why would the minister risk her reputation and possibly her position to rescue a Burundian national she had known for seven months?”

A source close to the matter claimed Mapisa-Nqakula had introduced Wege to South African businessma­n and politician Jabu Ngwenya, asking him to do business with Ngwenya.

Wege said he “hosted Ngwenya in Burundi at the request of the minister”, but refused to explain the nature of the business he and Ngwenya were pursuing.

Ngwenya confirmed yesterday that he knew Wege, but said their business deal had not materialis­ed.

“I am in the catering business and I wanted to cater for the soldiers in Burundi. Wege promised to introduce me to the president of Burundi, but it never happened when I was there.”

Ngwenya said Mapisa-Nqakula was his “chommie” but they had no business deals.

“I know the minister like I know almost everyone in the cabinet, she is my chommie.”

He confirmed that he went to Mapisa-Nqakula’s house last Sunday after the story was published — to, he said, visit the minister’s husband, who was ill with flu.

Ngwenya said that although Wege “is a wonderful and great person”, the way he does his business “left much to be desired”.

Mapisa-Nqakula last week accused Wege of also abusing Michelle’s mother to the point that she committed suicide. Wege dismissed the accusation.

“Michelle’s mother died in hospital and I wasn’t even in Burundi at the time, but in America. She wasn’t my wife but a girlfriend,” he said.

Mapisa-Nqakula said last week that Michelle was in South Africa on a study permit that she had organised and that she was studying at Boston College.

This week the Sunday Times establishe­d that Michelle attended classes at the college in Bedfordvie­w for a few months last year and was not attending classes there this year — in possible contravent­ion of immigratio­n rules.

This week, President Jacob Zuma’s office refused to confirm whether Mapisa-Nqakula was granted permission to go to the Congo on January 28 2014, when she negotiated Michelle’s release and gave her a lift in an air force jet.

 ?? Picture: DAYLIN PAUL ?? RITES: Nosiviwe MapisaNqak­ula at the funeral service of her son Chumani Nqakula last year. Also in the picture, front right, is Michelle Wege
Picture: DAYLIN PAUL RITES: Nosiviwe MapisaNqak­ula at the funeral service of her son Chumani Nqakula last year. Also in the picture, front right, is Michelle Wege

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