Abuse claims an effort to tarnish my name, says #MduduziManana

Former deputy minister of higher education, Mduduzi Manana. File picture: Lindi Masinga/ANA

Former deputy minister of higher education, Mduduzi Manana. File picture: Lindi Masinga/ANA

Published May 8, 2018

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Johannesburg - Convicted woman beater and former deputy minister of Higher Education and Training Mduduzi Manana believes there is a campaign to tarnish his image after allegations emerged that he abused his domestic worker.

Manana has denied shoving and pushing Christine Wiro, who started working for him two weeks ago.

He, however, admitted that he was expecting a guest on Sunday when the alleged assault and verbal abuse happened.

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“I have told her on two to three occasions that she must not open the gate or door to anyone without verifying with me first. I was expecting a guest (for breakfast on Sunday morning) and got upset when she opened the gate for someone I did not know.

“Like any other employer, I asserted authority to say that she cannot just open the door or gate for anyone,” Manana said.

Asked if he had assaulted or verbally abused Wiro, as she claimed to Douglasdale police in a case she withdrew hours later, Manana said: “Not at all. I'm not sure (why she'd say that). (It did not happen), that is why I think she went to the police station and withdrew the charges.

“I think it is an effort to tarnish my name.”

Manana said he did not want his domestic worker to open the door or gate to strangers because it was a “security risk”.

Manana said Wiro had contacted him, asking for money for work done over the past two weeks.

Gauteng police spokesperson Brigadier Mathapelo Peters confirmed that Wiro had withdrawn the charges. “She had opened a case of common assault and came back to the police station a few hours later to withdraw the case. No reasons were given. It is the prerogative of the victim to withdraw the case,” Peters said.

Wiro, 53, from Zimbabwe could not be reached for comment.

Manana, an ANC MP, last year pleaded guilty to assaulting three women at Cubana, a restaurant in Fourways, Joburg.

In November, he was sentenced to either a year imprisonment or to pay a R100 000 fine for beating the women after they allegedly called him “istabane (gay)”.

He was also ordered to pay each victim for damages. Manana also had to complete 500 hours of community service and attend counselling.

The Star

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