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Mugabe’s son fined $36,000, faces deportation from South Africa over toy gun incident

Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe, the youngest son of late Zimbabwean strongman Robert Mugabe, is facing deportation from South Africa.

This is after a Johannesburg court handed him a hefty fine tied to a bizarre toy gun incident that unfolded earlier this year, Reuters first reported.

The ruling, delivered Wednesday at the Alexandra Magistrates’ Court, brings a dramatic close to a case that has drawn attention not just for its legal implications, but for the unlikely mix of privilege, controversy, and recklessness surrounding one of southern Africa’s most recognisable political families.

Mugabe, believed to be in his late 20s, pleaded guilty to pointing a toy gun at an individual in a separate incident from a more serious shooting case that occurred at a luxury Johannesburg residence where he had been staying.

As part of a plea agreement with prosecutors, he was fined 400,000 rand (about $24,000) for the toy gun offence and an additional 200,000 rand for breaching immigration laws. The court confirmed that deportation proceedings would follow.

Though Mugabe himself was not charged in connection with the shooting, his involvement in a separate confrontation involving a toy gun paints a picture of a chaotic episode that quickly spiraled into legal jeopardy.

While the details of the immigration violation remain unclear, the financial penalty and deportation order mark a significant legal setback for Mugabe, who has largely stayed out of the public eye compared to other members of his high-profile family.

The story has inevitably reignited interest in the legacy of Robert Mugabe, the long-time ruler of Zimbabwe who held power for 37 years before being ousted in a military coup in 2017.

Once a towering figure in African politics, his family has since lived under a quieter, though occasionally controversial, spotlight. Robert Mugabe died in 2019 at the age of 95.