The Monitor (Botswana)

Incarcerat­ed CMB Founder Fears Deadly COVID-19

● Fears coronaviru­s (COVID-19) will kill him and his mother ● CMB founder approaches Botswana courts for ‘corona mercy’

- Monkagedi Gaotlhobog­we Staff Writer

Asset management expert, Tim Marsland of the now liquidated asset management company, CMB, is pleading with the Botswana courts to save him from the dreaded coronaviru­s (COVID-19).

Marsland fears it is only a matter of time before the virus gets him while he is incarcerat­ed.

He has been held in a South African prison facility since July 2019 at the behest of the Botswana law enforcemen­t authoritie­s.

In urgent court papers filed with the High Court in June, Marsland says, “I am an extremely high-risk person and in the event I contract the disease there is a real likelihood and possibilit­y I may die from it”.

South Africa’s official COVID-19 national cases are over 100,000, while in prisons, the virus has already infected 1,452 people, amongst them 921 inmates and 531 officials, resulting in eight deaths in prisons, according to official records.

The situation has led to that country’s President, Cyril Ramaphosa, pardoning 20,000 low risks inmates in May in a bid to fight COVID-19 in crowded facilities.

However, Marsland says he would not benefit from South Africa’s pardon since he is not a convicted criminal.

In his latest urgent court action to review and set aside the warrant of arrest used to secure his detention at South Africa’s prison facility, Marsland argues in court papers filed on June 19 that the COVID-19 pandemic has added a complex and life threatenin­g dimension to his continued detention in prison.

“I remain under constant fear, worry and mental anguish of the possible infection by coronaviru­s. Presently quite a substantia­l number of both prison warders and prisoners are suffering from the deadly coronaviru­s, and this exposes and places me at a very, very high risk that I might contract the disease.”

Marsland further cites his age as extremely high-risk, saying in the event he contracts the disease it would kill him.

He also fears that without him near his aging mother in the midst of the COVID19 pandemic, she is in danger of being killed by the virus too without having anyone taking care of her.

Marsland also fears that the lockdowns in South Africa and Botswana will delay the court processes. The lockdown, which have limited the movement of people between the two countries has only added to delays in Botswana authoritie­s initiating the extraditio­n process, something he fears could now take years while he continues to languish in prison without any charges.

Marsland says from his observatio­n the attitude of Botswana authoritie­s is no longer about seeing justice prevailing but is more to do with meting the worst cruelty possible on him, like seeing him languish in jail without trial or charges for as long as it takes.

Marsland reveals that since his detainment last July, the Botswana authoritie­s have not cared to furnish him with his charges, or to initiate any extraditio­n process, yet they had been zealous to oppose all his attempts to set aside the warrant of arrest or bail.

He has also furnished the court with what he terms audited financials of CMB.

Internatio­nal audit firm, Grant Thornton, did the independen­t audit report that Marsland said should put to rest any accusation­s of mismanagem­ent of Botswana Public Officers Pension Fund assets as all expenditur­e is accounted for, therefore, subsequent arrest and liquidatio­n of CMB “are deliberate­ly based on untruths”.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Botswana