In 2019, Zozibini Tunzi became the first black South African to be crowned Miss Universe.
Now just two years later, and yet another black South African could walk away with the prestigious title.
This time, 27-year-old Joburg-born Jeanette Akua is in line to win Miss Universe having this week been crowned Miss Universe Great Britain.
Akua, who spent most of her life in South Africa, will represent Britain in the Miss Universe finals competition which will be held in Florida, in the US, in May this year.
Currently a business development manager and singer, who now lives in London, Akua was announced as the winner in a virtual event on Tuesday, with Dr Vincent Wong as head judge.
Since scooping the crown, she took to Instagram to gush about the importance of following your dreams, writing: “I AM MISS UNIVERSE GREAT BRITAIN. I WON!!!
“This win means so much to me! It’s more than just a crown.
Pageants are more than just ’beauty’. It’s bigger than that.
“It’s about celebrating women and the many layers we come in.
“It’s about being AUDACIOUS and having the nerve to pursue your dreams.
“Feeling the fear and doing it anyway.
“Thank you God. My heart is so full.”
According to UK publication The Daily Mail, Akua, who is also a singer, moved to the UK after she was rejected when she auditioned for SA Idols.
Then 18, the Miss Universe GB representative had been handing out flyers for her part-time job in the Randburg district when gunmen swooped.
She admitted her parents weren’t aware that she had accepted the job and she was ‘naive’ to be working near a taxi rank where lots of crime take place.
Speaking to UK Publication The Mirror, in 2013, Akua said: “This man came over, grabbed my hand and yanked my hair.
“He was shouting but I didn’t understand the language he was speaking.
“When I answered him in English it only made him more angry.
“He was asking for my permit, saying I shouldn’t be there.”
She recalled being dragged inside a building where the kidnappers refused to give her access to water or a phone.
Jeanette said she was in tears, fearing for her life and was held at gunpoint for two days.
“I was so traumatised I could hardly speak.
“I am lucky to be alive,” she said.
Akua was freed after a R8000 ransom was apparently paid, however when she reported the incident, she said the police didn’t take it seriously because she wasn’t shot.
Leaving the ordeal behind in search of musical success in the UK, Akua was a beauty consultant when she began trying her luck on reality shows.