SAA flight attendant gets 7 years in UK Prison for drug smuggling

TysonRoux

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SA high commissioner's past as drug smuggler exposed

Ever wondered where you'll find old SAA drug mules?



SA high commissioner's past as drug smuggler exposed


outh Africa's high commissioner to Singapore is a convicted drug trafficker who was fired from SAA after being jailed in New York for smuggling a bag of cocaine.

Fifty-five-year-old Hazel Francis Ngubeni spent two years in a US prison between 1999 and 2001, but did not disclose her conviction when she was nominated for the diplomatic post in 2013.

During a vetting process by the State Security Agency, she claimed she did not have a criminal record.

Ngubeni admitted the conviction to the Sunday Times this week - but claimed she had been wrongfully jailed after a "strange bag was found in my luggage".

This was not her first brush with the law involving drug trafficking.

The Sunday Times has established that Ngubeni was also arrested on September 20 1995 at OR Tambo International Airport and charged with smuggling 9kg of heroin into South Africa from Thailand.

During both incidents, she was employed as a cabin attendant for SAA.

A fellow cabin crew member, who worked with Ngubeni at the time and asked not to be named, claimed Ngubeni had asked him to carry one of her bags into South Africa. Unbeknown to him, drugs were stashed in a false compartment.

The pair were acquitted in January 1997 after a key witness, reported to be a Mozambican diplomat, refused to testify against Ngubeni.

International relations experts have slated Ngubeni.

"The fact that she might not have revealed this during vetting raises serious questions about her integrity and therefore her fitness for the high office of a diplomat," said international relations expert Professor Siphamandla Zondi of the University of Pretoria's political science department.

"If confirmed, she would need to be recalled immediately and stripped of her diplomatic status. She should not be deployed elsewhere, she must be fired."

SAA confirmed this week that Ngubeni, who at the time went by the name Francis MacDonald, was fired after her arrest in New York.

"She was arrested, convicted and sent to jail, which made her unable to render any service to her employer," spokesman Tlali Tlali said.

God forgive us all! Diplomats are vetted to verify as to what extent would they become a liability to our country. I was made to believe that we have one of the highest security checks

A senior SAA manager said a human resource official flew to the US to hand-deliver her dismissal letter after her conviction.

"We could not have fired her if she was not convicted. It would have been illegal."

A former SAA senior manager at the time of Ngubeni's arrest in New York said the airline had commissioned her to approach Ngubeni's lawyer to seek permission to do an interview with her for a 25-minute in-house video. The point of the video would be to expose "the consequences of drug smuggling".

The request was declined.

Confronted with the allegations yesterday, Ngubeni initially refused to comment, saying "Do what you need to do without my input", before hanging up. After more detailed questions were sent, and she was confronted with the confirmation from SAA, Ngubeni asked the Sunday Times to hold off on the story until October 17 when she could give an interview in person.

She refused to answer specific questions , instead volunteering information about her father - who was part of the liberation movement. Pressed further, she admitted she had been arrested at OR Tambo in 1995. She had been "implicated because I had asked a colleague to carry my bags", she said. "Unbeknown to me he was given another bag by someone I knew," she said.

Alerted to the conviction, Department of International Relations spokesman Nelson Kgwete said the department would "look into all the matters ... and will work with all relevant state agencies to establish facts. The security vetting process for all our diplomats is a process that the relevant agencies are constantly reviewing with the intention of improving to avoid gaps and discrepancies."

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Hemi300c

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Let's see how the cadres handle this criminal.
From airhostess to "high", commissioner interesting, and well I suppose if a uneducated idiot and criminal can be president anything is possible.
 

SauRoNZA

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Always amazes me how they'll just keep on lying straight in the face of unequivocal evidence.
 

Acid0

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Well there go another blow for the reputation of SA (Yes I know we dont have one anymore, or would I say a good one). So from now on every SA person will be looked at like a potential mule when you land there.
 

Cray

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Well there go another blow for the reputation of SA (Yes I know we dont have one anymore, or would I say a good one). So from now on every SA person will be looked at like a potential mule when you land there.

That's a bit of a stretch, loads of people from the UK have been convicted of being drug mules in other countries - this problem is not unique to South Africa.
 

TysonRoux

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Well there go another blow for the reputation of SA (Yes I know we dont have one anymore, or would I say a good one). So from now on every SA person will be looked at like a potential mule when you land there.

No, they're smart enough to know that the regular passengers are not above average risk, but most certainly use more scrutiny when it comes to SAA crew.
 

access

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i see cyril is off to vietnam and singapore, right after the high commissioner to singapore was reported on.

i wonder if this was his side stukkie he had when flying, rushing to her aid now that shes in the spotlight.

all these drug mules closely tied with our government, even cweles wife. i wonder what the drug use is like among parliament members, it would sure make a lot of sense, the way they reason and think sometimes im sure they must be on something.
 

Arthur

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Well there go another blow for the reputation of SA
That's what saddens and angers me. There was a time when - our government's racialist politics aside - South Africans as persons were highly regarded as ethical, professional and capable people. Our representatives in dozens and dozens of international bodies on the whole did us proud - international trade and finance bodies, transportation (airline, maritime), telecommunications, healthcare, diplomatic and consular, academic, legal, resources, policing, etc, etc. Now we're eyed with suspicion and even disdain, our reputation in tatters.
 

Jet-Fighter7700

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That's what saddens and angers me. There was a time when - our government's racialist politics aside - South Africans as persons were highly regarded as ethical, professional and capable people. Our representatives in dozens and dozens of international bodies on the whole did us proud - international trade and finance bodies, transportation (airline, maritime), telecommunications, healthcare, diplomatic and consular, academic, legal, resources, policing, etc, etc. Now we're eyed with suspicion and even disdain, our reputation in tatters.

I do agree with you, but ever since friends of friends have been given positions based on lies,
that has fallen apart...

do wonder if it might go back to the way it was?
I mean the DA/EFF now hold some power, maybe we might have some movement in the right direction.
 
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