The Daily Telegraph

Grace Mugabe ‘ran poaching syndicate’

Police examine claims that Grace Mugabe used her diplomat status for illegal exports

- By Roland Oliphant

ZIMBABWEAN authoritie­s are investigat­ing Grace Mugabe, the former first lady, over allegation­s that she ran a poaching syndicate that smuggled tons of ivory out of the country. Emmerson Mnangagwa, who replaced Robert Mugabe as president, urged investigat­ors to “leave no stone unturned”.

ZIMBABWE police have launched an investigat­ion into Grace Mugabe, the former first lady, over allegation­s that she headed a poaching and smuggling syndicate which illegally exported tons of elephant tusks, gold, and diamonds from the country, The Daily

Telegraph can reveal. Emmerson Mnangagwa, the president of Zimbabwe, sanctioned an “urgent” investigat­ion into Mrs Mugabe’s activities after “very strong” evidence was uncovered by Adrian Steirn, an Australian photo-journalist.

Mrs Mugabe, who wielded significan­t power in Zimbabwean politics until Robert Mugabe, her husband, was ousted in a soft coup last November, was named as the alleged mastermind of the illegal operation by two suspected poachers who were later arrested in a police sting after trying to sell tusks to Mr Steirn. She has not yet been charged. Zimbabwe is home to about 86,000 elephants, the second largest population in Africa, according to a 2016 census. That figure represente­d a 10 per cent drop since 2005.

Although the population is considered healthy in the north-west of the country, losses have been heavy in other parts. About 900 elephants were lost to poachers between 2013 and 2016, nearly 250 of them poisoned with cyanide or shot.

Mrs Mugabe’s name was linked to large scale wildlife traffickin­g following a four-month investigat­ion by Mr Steirn, who posed as a customer for contraband ivory to infiltrate the smuggling and poaching networks. In an exclusive interview with The

Daily Telegraph, Mr Steirn said he decided to launch the investigat­ion after hearing rumours about Mrs Mugabe’s complicity in trade during several years reporting on wildlife crime in Africa. Lloyd, a man who spent five years in prison for poaching, provided the initial evidence that triggered the investigat­ion.

“For years I’ve been documentin­g the front-line poachers who end up serving 20 years for shooting a giraffe. Meanwhile, she was taking billions of dollars out of the country,” Mr Steirn said. “If they charge and arrest her, and she goes to jail for wildlife crimes, that will change the dynamic of the entire perception of wildlife traffickin­g across Africa,” he said.

Undercover footage filmed by Mr Steirn and seen by The Telegraph shows several sources, including suspected poachers and intelligen­ce, wildlife and aviation officials, describing how Mrs Mugabe smuggled ivory poached in national parks or looted from government warehouses out of the country by exploiting an exemption from airport security screening as first lady.

They include Fariken Madzinga, 48, a registered dealer of ivory who describes in the footage how he also runs a syndicate that handles both poached ivory and tusks stolen from the government’s secure stockpiles of wildlife products on behalf of Mrs Mugabe.

In conversati­ons with Mr Steirn recorded before his arrest, Mr Madzinga described how he relies on “the president and first lady” to get contraband tusks out of the country. “In order for it to pass through customs, the goods of the first lady were not searched. She had immunity from the government,” he added. “There is nobody who is going to open this.”

Mr Madzinga and Tafadzwa Pamire, 36, were arrested in a police sting after trying to sell Mr Steirn tusks they said had been procured from poachers. They were carrying six large tusks worth more than £16,000 as unprocesse­d ivory when they were apprehende­d while carrying out the sale on Feb 15, according to court documents. They are due to appear in court on April 9 charged with illegal possession of raw tusks.

Mr Steirn, who will be the main state witness in the trial, said he has received death threats warning him not to testify.

Documents seen by The Daily Telegraph suggest that an airport security loophole also extended to cargo shipments marked as assigned to the First Lady, allowing a much larger scale of traffic than would be possible in personal luggage. An Airport Security Protocol (ASP), issued by the Mugabe government’s Civil Aviation Authority, and printed on its letterhead, instructs the cargo department and all airport security not to scan or search any consignmen­t connected to the first family or their entourage.

While it is usual practice to exempt diplomats and heads of state, as well as immediate family members travelling with them, from searches, it is highly unusual to extend that waiver to unaccompan­ied cargo or beyond immediate family members. Christophe­r Mutsvangwa, a special adviser to Mr Mnangagwa, said the president was aware of the allegation­s and had sanctioned the investigat­ion based on the informatio­n revealed by Mr Steirn.

“We have commenced a full inquiry in addition to ongoing investigat­ions into the recent seizure of a large quantity of ivory that was bound for an overseas destinatio­n,” Mr Mutsvangwa, a former leader of Zimbabwe’s powerful associatio­n of War Veterans and a long standing critic of Mrs Mugabe within the ruling Zanu PF party, told The Daily

Telegraph. “The government of Zimbabwe will seek answers from all parties who have been implicated in this matter, including former first lady Grace Mugabe and former minister of

environmen­t Saviour Kasukuwere,” he said in an interview in Moscow, where he was an observer at last week’s Russian presidenti­al election.

Mr Mustvangwa said there is currently no suggestion that Mr Mugabe himself, who is now 94, is implicated in the smuggling ring.

However, he added that there was mounting evidence that the gang included high-ranking members of Mr Mugabe’s security apparatus and that the systemic smuggling also involved rhino horn, diamonds, and gold. “Ivory is just one part of it,” he said.

In his last five years in office, Mr Mugabe regularly travelled for medical treatment to Singapore using Air Zimbabwe’s only long-haul aircraft, a Boeing 767. He was often accompanie­d by Mrs Mugabe.

He last visited the city state in December, a month after he left office.

In the same day he flew out of Harare, on Dec 11, a consignmen­t of 440lbs (200kg) of ivory destined for Kuala Lumpur was seized at Harare internatio­nal airport.

While Mrs Mugabe’s alleged customers have not been named, Mr Mutswanga said the buyers are assumed to be organised criminal groups operating out of China and Malaysia. Such gangs have been linked to multi-million dollar poaching operations across Africa and have a reputation for extreme violence.

In August last year Wayne Lotter, a South African conservati­onist investigat­ing ivory smuggling networks, was shot dead in Tanzania.

And last month Esmond Bradley Martin, an American, and one of the world’s leading experts on the illegal wildlife trade, was stabbed to death at his home in Nairobi.

The exposure of top Zimbabwean officials in the illegal wildlife trade will come as little surprise to conservati­onists, who say official corruption, including cooperatin­g with major organised crime networks, has fuelled poaching.

“Corruption is key all along the supply chain,” said Lucy Vigne, a leading researcher into the smuggling of illegal ivory and rhino horn from Africa. “Officials may turn a blind eye for bribes or collude with the criminal traders in illegal wildlife trade activities themselves.”

“There has been a concerted internatio­nal effort to bring down the high-level traffickin­g networks of which Grace is an example,” said Frank Pope, chief executive officer of Save The Elephants, a leading charity.

“She is not alone in being a senior figure in ivory traffickin­g, not alone in this current crisis and not alone in the historical perspectiv­e of the ivory trade. There have been other senior figures who’ve lined their pockets substantia­lly from the ivory trade.”

Mrs Mugabe did not respond to multiple requests to comment.

Father Fidelis Mukonori, who is close to the Mugabe family, said he discussed the allegation­s with Mrs Mugabe and she said she was “unconcerne­d. She said it doesn’t matter”.

Mrs Mugabe, 52, grew notorious for her profligate spending during her nearly 20 years as First Lady of Zimbabwe. A Telegraph investigat­ion last year found that she spent an estimated £10million on a clutch of luxury properties in Zimbabwe and South Africa between 2014 and 2017. She has not explained how she funded the purchases.

Mr Mugabe’s salary as president was about $20,000 a month. He and Mrs Mugabe still live at the Blue Roof, the palatial Harare residence they built while he was president.

‘Corruption is key all along the supply chain. Officials may turn a blind eye to bribes or collude with traders’

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 ??  ?? Grace Mugabe, below. Right, the arrest of Fariken Madzinga and Tafadzwa Pamire
Grace Mugabe, below. Right, the arrest of Fariken Madzinga and Tafadzwa Pamire
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 ??  ?? Above: poaching trophies in a Harare warehouse recovered from trafficker­s. Below: Lloyd, a convicted poacher who was one of journalist Adrian Steirn’s informants
Above: poaching trophies in a Harare warehouse recovered from trafficker­s. Below: Lloyd, a convicted poacher who was one of journalist Adrian Steirn’s informants
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