
Namibian investigators are hunting down suspected thieves in stealing cash from the farm of South African President Cyril Ramaphosa.
According to a report published by the “New York Times”, investigators are tracking any “significant money transfers” suspected of originating in South Africa and destined for bank accounts in Namibia.
Officials in the Ministry of Justice in Namibia contacted their counterparts in South Africa, but received an unexpected response in the case, as no one responded to them.
The newspaper report indicated that two years after the theft, the “silence” of the official authorities in South Africa raises the debate about whether Ramaphosa is trying to hide the robbery from public view, and urges the official agencies to help him.
The theft took place on Ramaphosa’s farm, 650 miles from the border with Namibia, in February 2020, but it was not made public at the time, and the story only came to light recently.
One of Ramaphosa’s political opponents said the president was covering up the theft of $4-8 million from his possessions to avoid scrutiny of his possession.
Information indicates that the money was hidden in the furniture of the farm “Pala Fala” owned by the President of South Africa, according to the former head of State Security in South Africa, Arthur Fraser, who is considered a political opponent of Ramaphosa.
Fraser asserted that Ramaphosa never reported it to the police, and relied on his personal protection unit to conduct an illegal investigation.
This is not the first time that Ramaphosa has been subjected to a robbery, as he appeared in
A photographer last June asked about his iPad tablet, which had disappeared while participating in a press conference, and was later found.That moment when you think your iPad has been stolen. pic.twitter.com/zZkZExDgy2
— MJ Research (@MightiJamie) June 22, 2021
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