NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

CZI gets US$2,5m Swedish boost

- BY JULIA NDLELA/ BLESSED NDLOVU

THE Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI) will get US$2,5 million (SEK25 million) from the Swedish government to support its efforts to transform the local industry.

CZI has been implementi­ng a strategy to strengthen the institutio­n and deliver services to its members, who represent the largest manufactur­ing bloc in Zimbabwe.

The support comes at a time when manufactur­ers are in desperate need of foreign currency as official channels continue to prove difficult in supplying adequate amounts.

To generate foreign currency, these manufactur­ers need to upscale production to increase exports.

“Today, we are witnessing the effort that has been going on for a very long time. We have been working behind the scenes with Sida (Swedish Internatio­nal Developmen­t Cooperatio­n Agency) and this has culminated in what we are going to witness as co-operation in terms of what we can do for the next 100 years,” CZI president Kurai Matsheza said, at the official launch of this partnershi­p on Wednesday in Harare.

“We are going to drive our membership and support them so that there is manufactur­ing excellence to drive the economic activity of our beloved country.”

Matsheza added that this was a grant to CZI for institutio­nal capacity developmen­t which would assist the confederat­ion in being able to carry out its work.

“We are an advocacy, a lobby group so we assist all companies, predominan­tly those who are our members. We encourage those who are not our members to become our members so that we work with them, and we see them develop over the period.”

He said companies that engage CZI will get assistance.

“We identify the needs because what we want is the economy to grow and to see small guys coming from nowhere and become a company in five years, in 10 years and so on,” Matsheza added.

Sweden ambassador to Zimbabwe Per Lindgarde said that his government was happy to be working with CZI as it would foster an increased business presence by establishi­ng trade between the two countries.

“We see a lot of scope and opportunit­ies for cooperatio­n in the energy, mining, green economy, manufactur­ing, agri-business subsectors and are ready to explore other possibilit­ies for our mutual benefit.”

The agreement between Sida and CZI is under the latter’s strategy, From Institutio­nal Transforma­tion to Industrial Transforma­tion, which will last for three years.

The strategy’s focus is to reposition CZI for relevance, legitimacy, credibilit­y, effectiven­ess and leadership as the anchors to its mantra of enterprise — leadership — service.

Industry and Commerce permanent secretary Thomas Utete Wushe said the government was ready to assist CZI if the business member organisati­on approaches its offices.

“I think this interventi­on is coming at the right time. And we are keen to support it, as a government. I’ll just say we are here to sell and facilitate. So service is what you will get from us,” he said.

 ?? ?? (Front row from L) Swedish ambassador to Zimbabwe Per Lindgärde and CZI chief executive officer Sekai Kuvarika at the official launch of a partnershi­p between Sweden and the industrial­ists’ body in Harare on Wednesday. Looking on are CZI president Kurai Matsheza (backrow L) and Industry permanent secretary Thomas Utete Wushe.
(Front row from L) Swedish ambassador to Zimbabwe Per Lindgärde and CZI chief executive officer Sekai Kuvarika at the official launch of a partnershi­p between Sweden and the industrial­ists’ body in Harare on Wednesday. Looking on are CZI president Kurai Matsheza (backrow L) and Industry permanent secretary Thomas Utete Wushe.

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