In 1992, during the negotiations to end apartheid, Letsatsi-Duba returned to South Africa.[1] From then until 1994, she was a media liaison officer in the ANC's headquarters at Shell House.[3] She was also editor-in-chief of Voice of Women, the official journal of the ANC Women's League.[1] She later moved to Limpopo, where she entered business.[2] However, she remained active in the ANC: she was elected to the party's Provincial Executive Committee in Limpopo in 2007,[3] and in July 2008, she was elected as Provincial Treasurer, serving under Provincial Chairperson Cassel Mathale.[4] She remained in the treasury until December 2011, when she was succeeded by Pinky Kekana.[5]
When Stan Mathabatha succeeded Mathale as Premier in July 2013, Letsatsi-Duba was one of only two of Mathale's ministers whom Mathabatha retained, the other being Dickson Masemola.[9] Mathabatha appointed her as MEC for Health,[10] a position which she retained until the 2014 general election.[11]
National government: 2014–2019
Portfolio Committee on Public Enterprises: 2014–2017
Letsatsi-Duba's tenure in the committee coincided with revelations about alleged state capture, especially affecting state-owned entities. Later, in February 2021, she was summoned to appear before the Zondo Commission to testify about the committee's apparent failures of oversight. She was asked in particular about her refusal to launch – as suggested by opposition politician Natasha Mazzone – a committee inquiry into the Gupta family's contracts with state-owned entities.[13]
Deputy Minister of Public Service and Administration: 2017–2018
On 26 February 2018, Letsatsi-Duba was promoted to replace Bongani Bongo as Minister of State Security.[16] She was appointed to the position by Cyril Ramaphosa, who had recently succeeded Zuma as President. According to the Mail & Guardian, though previously regarded as a political supporter of Zuma, Letsatsi-Duba had supported Ramaphosa's successful bid to be elected ANC president at the party's 54th National Conference.[17]
After taking office, Letsatsi-Duba said that her major priority would be a "clean-up" of the State Security Agency, including a skills audit and investigations into alleged financial mismanagement.[1] In addition, in June, Ramaphosa appointed a high-level review panel, chaired by Sydney Mufamadi, to assess the agency's mandate, capacity, and integrity.[18] The review found that the agency had been subject to extensive dysfunction and political abuse.[19]
Spying allegations
In May 2019, the Sunday Independent published a front-page exposé that alleged that Letsatsi-Duba had lived a "double life" as a spy for the State Security Agency.[20] According to anonymous sources of journalists Piet Rampedi and Mzilikazi wa Afrika, Letsatsi-Duba had been an asset of the agency between 2005 and March 2017, when former State Security Minister David Mahlobo allegedly terminated her contract. In this account, she had earned millions of rands for spying on other ANC politicians; among other things, she had "infiltrated" the ANC's 2007 national conference. In conducting these activities, she had apparently relied on her directorships in several companies, notably a Polokwane-based security company called Motse Pele, which the report claimed was a front company. The article also claimed that Letsatsi-Duba had fired Arthur Fraser as head of the State Security Agency partly because he had refused to pay her money that she claimed the agency owed her.[20] In response, Letsatsi-Duba's ministry released a terse statement stating "categorically... that Minister Letsatsi-Duba has never been a source or agent of the SSA."[21][22]
Succession
Pursuant to the May 2019 general election, Letsatsi-Duba was re-elected to the National Assembly but was excluded from Ramaphosa's second-term cabinet. Ayanda Dlodlo replaced her as Minister of State Security.[23] Several days after the cabinet announcement, on 5 June 2019,[11] Letsatsi-Duba resigned from her parliamentary seat.[24]
Ambassador to Turkey: 2021–present
Letsatsi-Duba subsequently underwent diplomatic training as Ramaphosa's Ambassador-Designate to Turkey. In March 2020, the Sunday Times reported that her deployment was delayed because she had been denied the requisite security clearance due to undisclosed commercial and financial interests.[25][26] However, she presented her credentials in Ankara, Turkey on 5 November 2021.[27]
During her time in Ankara, at the ANC's 55th National Conference in December 2022, Letsatsi-Duba was re-elected to another five-year term as a member of the ANC National Executive Committee.[28]
Personal life
She was married to Mose Jacob Duba,[21] a businessman from Polokwane who formerly served as a minister in the government of the Lebowa bantustan. He died of cancer in Johannesburg in August 2008.[29]