South Africa’s Minister of Communication Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams has left everyone confused in an attempt to defend herself against allegations of misuse of state resources.
Ndabeni-Abrahams had been accused of using public money to fund her wedding anniversary celebrations by taking her husband, Thato Abrahams, on working visits to the US and Switzerland.
Thato Abrahams was also reported to have used his wife’s officially supplied “chauffeur-driven Mercedes-Benz S600” to travel from Geneva to Paris, in France, “to go shopping”.
At the time, Ndabeni-Abrahams described the allegations as a “malicious smear campaign” and insisted that both policy and process were not flouted in her husband accompanying her to Geneva and New York.
She said in a statement at the time: “That the trip coincided with the minister’s anniversary is of no consequence as public funds were not used and/or misused for this purpose.
“It is also malicious to claim that Mr Abrahams traveled to France on a ‘shopping spree’ utilising public funds as his passport, which is available for scrutiny, clearly reveals that he was in Geneva at all times during this trip.
“A baseless allegation is also made that Mr Abrahams used a ‘chauffeur-driven Mercedes Benz S600 that was allocated to the minister’ for the said ‘shopping spree’. This is devoid of all truth because it did not happen.”
However, confusion arises after the Communications Minister granted another interview with eNCA on Wednesday morning.
Ndabeni-Abrahams defended herself against the “malicious” allegations and welcomed an investigation into the matter but left viewers asking where exactly she went with her husband.
Ndabeni-Abrahams said: “Do you think I would take my husband to a wedding anniversary in Switzerland? I’ve never been to Switzerland. My husband has never been to Switzerland. We went to Geneva and New York to, of course, do the work that I’m expected to do.”
The minister confused viewers who are aware that Geneva is the second-most populated city in Switzerland, though some argued that there was another Geneva in the US state of New York.
Confused South Africans have, however, asked the minister to clarify which Geneva she was referring to.