The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Mangoma, Zesa boss face fresh charges

- Tendai Rupapa and Geraldine Zaranyika

FORMER Minister of Energy and Power Developmen­t Elton Mangoma, Zesa chief executive Joshua Chifamba and managing director of Zesa Enterprise­s Tererai Mutasa appeared in court yesterday facing fresh charges of criminal abuse of office.

According to the State, the trio’s actions caused Zesa Enterprise­s to suffer prejudice of $850 000.

They appeared before magistrate Ms Ruramai Chitumbura, who released them on $1 000 bail each with the prosecutio­n’s consent.

They were ordered to surrender their passports and report once a week to the police.

The trio allegedly entered into a technology transfer partnershi­p with a South Korean company Techpro Company Limited for the manufactur­ing of switchgear­s without due process.

Five years down the line Techpro Company failed to execute the project after getting an initial payment of $850 000.

The State is alleging that this happened in 2010 when Choi Young Jin of Techpro Company met Mangoma at his offices in Harare.

They signed a technology transfer partnershi­p between Zesa Enterprise­s and Techpro for the manufactur­ing of switchgear­s.

Mangoma allegedly instructed Mutasa to liaise with Techpro with the view of establishi­ng the partnershi­p.

The court heard that Mutasa wrote to the State Procuremen­t Board seeking advice on the procedures to be followed in such partnershi­ps.

He was advised to proceed with Section 49 of the repealed procuremen­t regulation­s act Chapter 22:14.

Mutasa was further advised to seek assistance from State Enterprise­s Restructur­ing Agency (SERA) on how to proceed.

SERA advised Mutasa to prepare a memorandum for Mangoma to submit to Inter-Ministeria­l Committee on Commercial­isation and Privatisat­ion of Parastatal­s (IMCCP) recommendi­ng the identifica­tion of a technical partner for the technologi­cal transfer through a competitiv­e bidding process.

The State alleges that Mutasa complied with the instructio­ns assisted by SERA officials up to a stage where the business proposal memorandum and bid documents for tender were forwarded to Mangoma for recommenda­tion and final approval by IMCCP.

On receiving the proposal and bid documents for tender, Chifamba and Mangoma allegedly connived to bypass the approval by IMCCP and the competitiv­e bidding process and favoured Techpro company.

It is alleged that the trio decided to apply the provisions of section 48(3) (b) and (e) and 48 (4) of the public finance and management act which required the approval of Mangoma and the Treasury.

The matter was deferred to January 29.

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