Enhle Mbali Mlotshwa has seemingly thrown shade at her ex-husband, Black Coffee – real name Nkosinathi Maphumulo – with cryptic comments about pain, trauma, and betrayal.
This comes after he publicly disputed claims that he was in a customary marriage with her, despite them having a traditional wedding in 2011.
The couple’s divorce judgement made headlines this week again, after the Constitutional Court ruled that antenuptial contracts signed after customary marriages were invalid.
ENHLE MBALI CLAPS BACK AT EX?
Just days after Black Coffee’s comments, Enhle Mbali seemingly responded with cryptic quotes on her Instagram Stories.
One featured a scene from HBO’s Euphoria, starring Zendaya, with a quote that read: “When the person who created your trauma complains about your pain”.
Another featured a clip of a man giving a snake water, which later bit him. The quote read: “Some souls know nothing but betrayal. No matter how much kindness they receive”.
WHAT DID BLACK COFFEE SAY?
Shortly after the Constitutional Court ruled that antenuptial contracts signed after customary marriages – and the practice of lobola – was invalid, Black Coffee broke his silence on social media.
The DJ responded to a video post by podcaster Penuel Mlotshwa, who argued that lobola did not constitute a civil union, which, by default, is set to an in-community-of-property contract.
Black Coffee boldly stated: “There was no customary marriage” of his union to Enhle Mbali Mlotshwa.
He added: “We both never intended to do a customary marriage”, and “even our prenup stated that we were unmarried”.
Black Coffee and Enhle Mbali Mlotshwa reportedly wed in a Zulu traditional wedding in 2011. This, after lobola negotiations were made with the actress’s family.
In 2017, the couple signed an antenuptial contract ahead of their white wedding, which took place at Sun City.
Last year, their divorce was finalised at the Johannesburg High Court. The court declared the couple’s 2017 antenuptial contract as invalid. Black Coffee has been ordered to pay his ex over R60 000 in spousal support each month until her death or remarriage.
