News / Africa
South African Dreadlocked drug trafficker's family relying on media reports to stay informed
14 Dec 2011 at 18:43hrs | Views
Grahamstown - Alleged drug mule Nolubabalo Nobanda called her uncle, Mthetheli Mbewu, just after she was caught with drugs at Thailand's Bangkok airport on Monday.
"After she told me she had been arrested, someone took the phone and hung up," Mbewu said on Wednesday.
He said he heard a foreign language spoken in the background. He believes it might have been Bangkok police.
Mbewu said he went to her parents, who at first didn't believe him. They thought Nobanda had just been joking.
But when her father did an internet search of his daughter's name, he was shocked by pictures showing cocaine being removed from her dreadlocks.
The 23-year-old was arrested after police noticed a white substance in her hair after she stepped off a Qatar Airways flight. Police found 1.5kg of cocaine with an estimated street value of $150 000 (R1.2m) hidden in her dreadlocks.
She admitted to smuggling the drug and said she was hired to deliver it to a customer at a Bangkok hotel.
SA embassy
Mbewu said the family had been relying on media reports to stay informed about Nobanda's whereabouts, as they wait for the South African embassy to help.
Mbewu believed she may have been forced to smuggle the drugs.
"She does not need anything. She was fine the last two weeks. Someone is behind this," he said.
News of Nobanda's arrest had been kept a secret from her grandmother, who suffers from diabetes, until she kept hearing her granddaughter's name on the radio. A family member said she thought maybe her granddaughter had made some academic achievement.
The family broke the news to her late on Tuesday night. She took it badly, Mbewu said.
Nobanda's mother, Wanjiswa Ncepu said she had not been sleeping for days and was afraid of leaving her house because people were asking questions.
'I want my life back'
"All eyes in this location are on us, and I am even afraid to walk outside. I am told that detainees in prisons where Nolubabalo is are not supplied with food; they have to buy. So how can I continue to eat while I do not know where my child is?"
Ncepu said she wished she could have her daughter back in the country.
"I really do not deserve this in my life. I want my life, my daughter's life back."
A prayer meeting was expected to be held at the family's home on Wednesday night by neighbours showing their support.
South African ambassador to Thailand Douglas Gibson confirmed to the family he would meet Nobanda on Thursday at a prison in Bangkok.
"After she told me she had been arrested, someone took the phone and hung up," Mbewu said on Wednesday.
He said he heard a foreign language spoken in the background. He believes it might have been Bangkok police.
Mbewu said he went to her parents, who at first didn't believe him. They thought Nobanda had just been joking.
But when her father did an internet search of his daughter's name, he was shocked by pictures showing cocaine being removed from her dreadlocks.
The 23-year-old was arrested after police noticed a white substance in her hair after she stepped off a Qatar Airways flight. Police found 1.5kg of cocaine with an estimated street value of $150 000 (R1.2m) hidden in her dreadlocks.
She admitted to smuggling the drug and said she was hired to deliver it to a customer at a Bangkok hotel.
SA embassy
Mbewu said the family had been relying on media reports to stay informed about Nobanda's whereabouts, as they wait for the South African embassy to help.
Mbewu believed she may have been forced to smuggle the drugs.
News of Nobanda's arrest had been kept a secret from her grandmother, who suffers from diabetes, until she kept hearing her granddaughter's name on the radio. A family member said she thought maybe her granddaughter had made some academic achievement.
The family broke the news to her late on Tuesday night. She took it badly, Mbewu said.
Nobanda's mother, Wanjiswa Ncepu said she had not been sleeping for days and was afraid of leaving her house because people were asking questions.
'I want my life back'
"All eyes in this location are on us, and I am even afraid to walk outside. I am told that detainees in prisons where Nolubabalo is are not supplied with food; they have to buy. So how can I continue to eat while I do not know where my child is?"
Ncepu said she wished she could have her daughter back in the country.
"I really do not deserve this in my life. I want my life, my daughter's life back."
A prayer meeting was expected to be held at the family's home on Wednesday night by neighbours showing their support.
South African ambassador to Thailand Douglas Gibson confirmed to the family he would meet Nobanda on Thursday at a prison in Bangkok.
Source - Sapa