More suspensions over ‘Indian wedding’ row

May 03, 2013 10:45 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 08:30 pm IST - JOHANNESBURG:

The aircraft that carried the wedding party prepares to take-off from the Waterkloof Air Force Base near Pretoria, South Africa on Thursday.

The aircraft that carried the wedding party prepares to take-off from the Waterkloof Air Force Base near Pretoria, South Africa on Thursday.

Five South African officials, including police and military commanders, have been suspended after a chartered plane carrying about 200 guests from India to a lavish family wedding was allowed to land at a South African air force base, the government said on Friday.

The scandal, in which the passengers allegedly bypassed customs procedures on their way to an entertainment complex, has angered many South Africans who see the episode as a case of cronyism linking big business and the highest levels of government in a country where corruption is a growing problem.

The government sought to stem public outrage over the incident, launching an investigation into how the Airbus A330 was given permission to land on Tuesday at the Waterkloof Air Force Base and ordering it to fly on Thursday to a civilian international airport in Johannesburg. The wedding festivities wrapped up on Friday.

The guests attended the wedding of Vega Gupta, whose Indian immigrant family has powerful business interests in South Africa, and groom Aakash Jahajgarhia in an extravaganza spanning several days at Sun City, a leisure centre northwest of Johannesburg. Some current and former South African officials also attended.

Justice Minister Jeff Radebe said the suspended officials included two Brigadier Generals at the air force base and the head of state protocol, Bruce Koloane.

Mr. Radebe added: “Our particular concern is that the aircraft was carrying international passengers who do not fit the category of government officials or VIPs on official duty”

According to authorities, two police officers and a reservist were also arrested for working for a private security company that provided escort vehicles — black BMWs equipped with illegal emergency lights and false registrations — during the wedding guests’ transfer from the military base to Sun City. Authorities were also investigating the alleged use of marked police vehicles in the incident, Mr. Radebe said.

The Democratic Alliance, an opposition political party, said in a statement that Parliament should open an investigation and alleged that the government’s reaction was as an attempt to protect President Jacob Zuma and Cabinet Ministers from the “political fallout” of the scandal by targeting lower-ranking officials. South African media reports said a son and a nephew of Mr. Zuma were among the guests.

SABC, South Africa’s state broadcaster, quoted Virendra Gupta, India’s high commissioner, as saying permission for the plane to land at the base had been requested because of security concerns for VIPs and “senior political figures from India” on the flight.

The South African government, however, said it did not have a record of notification from the Indian High Commission.

Instead, it said, India’s Defence Attaché in South Africa requested clearance from the air force, which consulted the office of state protocol without informing the military chief.

Photographs of the wedding ceremony showed the couple as they floated on a platform across a pool at the Palace of the Lost City, one of Sun City’s deluxe locations. The bride was also photographed joining the groom after stepping out of a sculpture of a giant lotus flower.

While many South African newspapers focused on the scandal, the Gupta-owned TheNew Age newspaper carried a front-page headline on the event: “A union of elegance and tradition.”

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