NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Mandiwanzi­ra denies link with ‘Zim cartels’

- BY WINSTONE ANTONIO l Follow Winstone on Twitter @widzoanto

FORMER Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology minister Supa Mandiwanzi­ra, who is also Nyanga South MP, has threatened to sue South African publicatio­n, Maverick Citizen, over its article where it alleged that he was corrupt and allegedly involved in illicit business deals.

Mandiwanzi­ra was one of the Zanu PF officials named in a 64-page report, The Massive Scale of State Capture and Corruption in Zimbabwe, which was published by the Daily Maverick, where he was alleged to be the owner of a company called Univern.

The company (Univern) allegedly entered into dubious deals with the government-owned Zimbabwe National Road Administra­tion.

The South African media house claimed to be in possession of details of the scale of the alleged theft and illicit cross-border financial transactio­ns that had resulted in Zimbabwe losing up to US$3 billion a year in illicit financial flows.

On Monday, Mandiwanzi­ra during an interview with SABC threatened to take legal action against the editor of the publicatio­n, Mark Heywood.

“I have been on social media denying the allegation­s and I have communicat­ed with the Daily Maverick, which has not had the courtesy of withdrawin­g the allegation­s. We are definitely taking legal action and this week they will be receiving papers from our lawyers in Johannesbu­rg,” he said.

“What I have a problem with regarding this report is the mention of my name being linked to a company called Univern. It’s a repeat of a discredite­d allegation, and I do believe that the editor of this report together with its publishers should have taken more care in establishi­ng the veracity of such an allegation.”

Added Mandiwanzi­ra: “If anybody claims to be doing an investigat­ion that is independen­tly verified, surely they should be able to give an opportunit­y to those who are mentioned to give their side of the story.

“No such opportunit­y was given to me and my biggest concern is that the informatio­n over who owns this company is publicly available here in Zimbabwe.”

In trying to defend the story, Heywood said: “... It mentions Mr Mandiwanzi­ra not as the owner. He has mentioned repeatedly on social media in the last few days that we claimed he is the owner of this company, Univern. The report says no such thing.

“It has been alleged that former minister Supa Mandiwanzi­ra is a shareholde­r of Univern. Supa Mandiwanzi­ra also appears to own the company Tarcon ... these are not new allegation­s incidental­ly, they were first published in 2014 by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal.”

Heywood claimed the report was independen­tly verified and fact-checked in Zimbabwe.

In a statement yesterday, Adam Molai and Pacific Cigarette Company also described the Maverick Citizen’s claims about their alleged involvemen­t in cartel power dynamics in Zimbabwe as “vindictive and without foundation”.

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