NFP wants SA to ban Grace Mugabe over ‘violent behaviour’





The party says it believes Zimbabwe’s first lady is a serious threat to South African citizens.

The National Freedom Party (NFP) on Tuesday called on South African authorities to ban Grace Mugabe, the wife of Zimbabwe’s 93-year-old President Robert Mugabe, from visiting the country after reports surfaced that she assaulted a young model found in her sons’ Sandton hotel room.


“We call on the South African government led by President Jacob Zuma to officially ban Grace Mugabe’s permit to visit South Africa as a sign that our government is dealing with the issue of women abuse very seriously. We believe Grace Mugabe is a serious threat to South African citizens, the recent incident has clear reference,” said Sabelo Sigudu, the NFP spokesperson.

Mugabe’s two sons, Robert Jnr and Chatunga, have been living in a hotel since they were evicted last month from their R74 000-a-month luxury apartment over a brawl that left a security guard at the complex injured.

On Sunday, the 20-year-old model, identified as Gabriella Engels, said she was whipped with an electric extension cord by Mugabe, who was in the company of bodyguards. She sustained head injures and that required stitches.

The NFP, which has a female leader in Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi, said it had noted with “serious disappointment the alleged savagely cruel act of Zimbabwe’s First Lady,Grace Mugabe”.




The party said Zimbabwe’s 55-year-old First Lady’s behaviour undermined the rule of law in South Africa and rights of citizens in general. The matter has been reported to the police in Morningside.

Meanwhile, reports have surfaced that Grace Mugabe had handed herself over to police and was due to appear in a Johannesburg court later on Tuesday.

August is Women’s Month in South Africa.

“We refuse to seat back and and watch women being abused and undermined, especially during the month were we commemorate their role and achievements in the past struggle.”

Grace Mugabe has in the past landed in trouble for assaulting reporters in Singapore when they tried to take photographs of her husband at a hospital in that country, where he regularly seeks medical attention.

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