Pubdate: Wed, 22 Sep 2004 Source: Star, The (South Africa) Copyright: Independent Newspapers 2004 Contact: http://www.thestar.co.za/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/423 Author: Themba Sepotokele Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) DRUGLORD'S SANDTON HQ? In the early 1990s, Ngengelezi Zaccheus Mngomezulu was a taxi driver, shuttling commuters to their destinations. Within a few years he had become a multimillionaire, owning properties in KwaZulu Natal and plush suburbs of Sandton. But his opulent lifestyle has attracted the attention of the police, who allege he is a major druglord. On July 4, he was arrested with another suspect, Ngcobondwane Vuyani, for manufacturing and dealing in drugs. Yesterday, the Asset Forfeiture Unit of the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) seized multimillion-rand assets in Sandton and KwaZulu Natal belonging to Mngomezulu and his wife, Nontando. These included a dozen properties with a combined value of about R16,75-million. However, most of the valuables at his double-storey mansion in Morningside, Sandton, had been removed by the time the authorities arrived yesterday. In the late 1990s, the 54-year-old Mngomezulu, described in news reports as "an Umkhonto weSizwe cadre", was linked as an investor in the Virodene scandal. Touted as an Aids drug, it was found to be an ineffectual, toxic industrial solvent. NPA spokesperson Makhosini Nkosi said the Organised Crime Unit had swooped in July on one of Mngomezulu's properties in Kevin Close, Rivonia, after an investigation into alleged drug trafficking. "In the house, the two suspects (Mngomezulu and Vuyani) were found in possession of a large amount of methaqualone (the active ingredient in Mandrax)." He said police also found a large number of Mandrax tablets, equipment used to make Mandrax, machines that could produce 70 000 tablets an hour, metal funnels, electronic scales, heat-sealing machines, face masks, scoops and fans. Nkosi said the Mandrax could have been sold on the streets for about R18-million. "From their observation, the police could conclude that the property was used to manufacture or package Mandrax tablets for sale. It was also clear that the house was not used as a dwelling, but as a Mandrax factory." Nkosi said Mngomezulu was out on R100 000 bail and Vuyani on R30 000 bail. They would appear in court again on October 28. During the bail application, Nkosi added, the alleged druglord had failed to account for his opulent lifestyle, which included sending two of his children to a school in Switzerland, and one abroad to study for an MBA. As the media approached the R4-million Morningside property yesterday, Mngomezulu dashed into a white Toyota Conquest parked outside and drove off. Gauteng provincial police commissioner Perumal Naidoo remarked: "Thath' a machance thina thatha zonke", loosely translated as "if you take chances by benefiting from the proceeds of crime, police will repossess your properties". These are the immovable assets of Ngengelezi Mngomezulu (including houses and cluster houses) which will be placed under curatorship pending the outcome of his criminal trial. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin