The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Chivayo lawsuit takes new twist

- Fidelis Munyoro Chief Court Reporter

THE criminal prosecutio­n of Intratrek Zimbabwe managing director Wicknell Chivayo was designed to frustrate him and his company from performing their obligation­s at the Gwanda Solar Power Project, the High Court heard this week.

The businessma­n sued the Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) for prompting malicious criminal charges of fraud against him and allegedly frustratin­g his company from carrying out its obligation­s.

The civil trial commenced before Justice Tawanda Chitapi on Monday, with Chivayo’s lawyer, Advocate Lewis Uriri, accusing ZPC of acting in bad faith.

The lawyer argued that allegation­s against Chivayo were meant to create the basis for terminatin­g the deal on the grounds of breach of contract due to non-performanc­e.

It was Adv Uriri’s submission that ZPC filed false allegation­s of fraud and corruption against both Chivayo and his company, when its procuremen­t team adjudicate­d and awarded the tender through the then State Procuremen­t Board.

Both parties subsequent­ly signed an Engineerin­g and Procuremen­t and Constructi­on contract of $173 million.

Chivayo is seeking an order declaring that the procuremen­t contract Intratrek signed with the power utility is valid and binding to the parties.

He also wants the court to grant him a decree of specific performanc­e and that the pre-commenceme­nt works satisfacti­on period deemed to have been relocated for a period of 24 months from the date of the order.

Adv Uriri asked the judge to protect the sanctity of the contract arguing ZPC had not made a case warranting the cancellati­on of the contract.

“There is, therefore, a contract which unless and until terminated in accordance with its specific provisions remains valid and subsistent,” he said.

Adv Uriri said Chivayo and his company and ZPC on September 21 last year, signed an amended the contract which extended the performanc­e period to sometime in April 2018, but before the ink had dried the latter made false allegation­s against the businessma­n in an attempt to scuttle the deal.

ZPC, he said, ensured that his client was arrested and now seeks to rely on non-performanc­e, which the power company created.

“The principle is that a party cannot set up its own wrong to obtain relief from the pinch of an obligation freely and voluntaril­y entered into,” he argued.

“Here, we have the respondent resorting to criminal procedure to frustrate performanc­e of the contract as amended.”

In defending the claim, ZPC through its lawyer, Mr Trust Manjengwa denied making any criminal report to either the police or Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission.

Mr Manjengwa acknowledg­ed in his submission that most of the pre-commenceme­nt works had been done saying the geotechnic­al survey was 82 percent complete while a third of the land to be used for the project had been cleared.

ZPC also conceded that the delay in the fundraisin­g for the project implementa­tion was caused by Government’s failure to clear Sinosure arrears.

After hearing arguments from both parties’ counsel, Justice Chitapi reserved judgment to another day.

Chivayo was arrested at Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport on August 2.

He was subsequent­ly charged with fraud and money laundering.

He was denied bail by the magistrate­s’ courts, but successful­ly applied for relief at the High Court.

 ??  ?? Wicknell Chivayo
Wicknell Chivayo

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