NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

UK MP fumes over Zim minister’s US$330K supercar purchase

- BY MOSES MATENGA Follow Moses on Twitter on mmatenga

ZANU PF has declared war with the United Kingdom after one of the former coloniser’s MPs yesterday said he would raise questions in the House of Lords over how a yet to be identified Zimbabwean minister managed to purchase a US$330 000 Rolls-Royce Phantom at a time when the southern African nation was experienci­ng economic meltdown.

This was after GVE London, one of UK’s leading suppliers of luxury vehicles, took to Twitter last week and told the world about the delivery to Harare of a luxury vehicle bought by an unnamed Zimbabwe minister.

A British Liberal Democrat politician and member of the House of Lords, Jonathan Oates said he would raise questions over how the transactio­n was handled so that action could be taken by the UK government if there was any wrongdoing.

“These are the questions I intend to table in Parliament tomorrow on the source of funds in the alleged purchase of a Rolls-Royce Phantom from GVE London by a Zimbabwean minister ...

“To ask Her Majesty’s government what obligation­s UK companies are under to conduct due diligence on the source of funds when selling luxury vehicles to politicall­y exposed persons in Zimbabwe and other countries where widespread corruption is evident ...,” Oates said.

“To ask Her Majesty’s government whether it will investigat­e the due diligence done by GVE London into the funds allegedly used by a Zimbabwean minister to purchase a Rolls-Royce Phantom.”

“To ask Her Majesty’s government what proportion of suspicious activity reports result in action by the police or other relevant authoritie­s,” Oates added.

He said he would also ask his government whether there had been discussion­s between the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and the Bank of England on whether foreign currency regulation­s were followed in the transactio­n.

Zanu PF chief whip in the National Assembly Pupurai Togarepi yesterday described the British as hypocrites, adding that he would raise a motion in the House

today for the UK government to return what “they stole from us”.

“It’s hypocrisy. Serious hypocrisy,” Togarepi said. “We are just a member of the internatio­nal community and our citizens are free to buy whatever they want, wherever they want.

“It will be the first time we will be seeing a whole government trying to investigat­e an individual who has acquired a product that they sell. It is hypocrisy, it is political and just double standards. They looted our gold, our diamonds, our resources from Africa and they paraded them on television many times.

“They are rich today because of Africa and they have never said let us return just half or a quarter of what we looted. They do not have the moral ground to be speaking on these issues.”

He accused the MDC Alliance of feeding the British with wrong informatio­n that Sports deputy minister Tinomudais­he Machakaire had imported the vehicle.

“They are exposing the MDC hoodlums because they are now coming to attack an individual based on tweets by the MDC people. It is just political machinatio­ns,” Togarepi said.

“We have no problem with them raising this in their House of Commons, but personally, I am going to raise it in the Zimbabwean Parliament that it’s time we ask for reparation­s from the British, and I will mobilise the Pan-African Parliament to ensure that this becomes Africa driven.”

He said if a person worked hard in Zimbabwe, they could purchase anything, even a Boeing aircraft.

The vehicle that is now in Harare was initially linked to Machakaire, the Wedza South MP, who has, however, distanced himself from the acquisitio­n.

Machakaire said although he had the capacity to buy such a luxurious vehicle, and even more, this one was not his.

The MDC Alliance came out guns blazing over the acquisitio­n of the luxurious vehicle, saying it was testimony of looting by the Zanu PF elite while millions of Zimbabwean­s were living in abject poverty.

 ??  ?? Sports deputy minister Tinomudais­he Machakaire
Sports deputy minister Tinomudais­he Machakaire

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