The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zacc raps Moyo, reveals bank details

Money not used for party programmes Public bombarded with lies

- Lloyd Gumbo Herald Reporter

NOT a single cent of money allegedly siphoned from the Zimbabwe Manpower Developmen­t Fund (Zimdef) by Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Developmen­t Minister Professor Jonathan Moyo and his Deputy Dr Godfrey Gandawa went to Zanu-PF.

Investigat­ions by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) showed that the money went to personal business.

Commission­er Goodson Nguni, who chairs the ZACC investigat­ions Committee, yesterday dismissed claims by Prof Moyo that the money had been used to fund Zanu-PF activities such as the Million-Man March, Women and Youth League meetings.

Speaking tongue-in-cheek as he addressed the media at ZACC offices in Harare in the wake of allegation­s levelled against him by Prof Moyo, Comm Nguni said investigat­ions revealed that all the money that was siphoned from Zimdef had been used for personal purposes by Prof Moyo, Dr Gandawa, Zimdef chief executive Mr Fredrick Mandizvidz­a and Prof Moyo’s personal assistant, Mr Shephard Honzeri.

“The public has been bombarded with lies, half-truths and complete fabricatio­ns by persons who may face charges of fraud, abuse of office, money laundering arising out of violating the National Manpower Developmen­t Act,” said Comm Nguni.

“Zimdef finances, in terms of the Act, must only be used for manpower developmen­t. The trustee, who is the Minister of Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Developmen­t, is the only one entrusted with the funds generated and paid into Zimdef,” he said.

“But he must do so on the advice of the National Management Council. In this case, the National Management Council has not been aware of any financial expenditur­es by Zimdef.

“That means, we know what Zimdef was paid for, we know who asked for it and we know all the money that was paid out of that expenditur­e. We followed all the papers that were used to pay various people and we have the informatio­n.”

Comm Nguni said investigat­ions revealed that all the money from Zimdef was used to offset personal loans, buy personal furniture and was also deposited into the accounts of journalist­s.

He said paper trail showed that money would be deposited into a Fuzzy Technologi­es bank account before being used to pay for various things, including journalist­s.

He produced a bank statement which indicated that former Chronicle Editor Mduduzi Mathuthu received $2 500, while $50 000 was paid to a private media journalist­s-owned non-government­al organisati­on in Bulawayo.

Comm Nguni declined to name a journalist from the private media who allegedly got $9 000.

“We have all the statements from Zimdef, from Fuzzy Technologi­es, a company owned by Dr Gandawa. No money from Zimdef benefited any political party. It is a lie. All monies that have been paid out have been traced to the personal benefit of Prof Moyo, Dr Gandawa, Mr Honzeri and Mr Mapute. No money was paid to any political party or to the benefit of any political party. The beneficiar­ies of all these monies that we would want to charge people for, are those people that I have

mentioned,” he said.

“The money from Zimdef was used to buy personal furniture, bicycles, tricycles but the documentat­ion was forged to say that the money was for a computeris­ation programme.

“The money from Zimdef was used to offset loans obtained in personal capacity by Dr Gandawa. And he paid $70 000 to a loan in an account with Barclays. We have an RTGS that he wrote in his handwritin­g and signed,” said Comm Nguni.

He added: “Thousands of dollars were used to purchase goods for personal companies of Dr Gandawa and some business connection­s related to Dr Gandawa.

“We had sight of a bank statement of Dr Gandawa, we obtained them legally through a court order. They show that the only business transactio­ns that are in Fuzzy Technologi­es account — Dr Gandawa’s account — are deposits from Zimdef, Great Zimbabwe University and Zimbabwe Open University. No other business deposits are there.

“We followed the purchases and drawdowns from that Fuzzy Technol- ogies account, no political party benefited in any way.

“You people in the media have been writing that the Zimdef funds were used to fund the Million-Man March. I want to confirm today that we have followed all the payments, for which we are charging them, there is no money that was used to finance the Million-Man March in this transactio­n where we seek to charge these people. For example, some of these payments happened in 2015. The Million-Man March was 26 May 2016.”

He said some of the transactio­ns took place before the Women and Youth League meetings.

Comm Nguni said the Act only allowed the minister to direct Zimdef payment, yet Dr Gandawa illegally performed the same responsibi­lities.

“The deputy minister has no authority whatsoever in terms of the Act to approve any payments by Zimdef. Yet we have instances where he was ordering Zimdef to buy a car for the minister and his PA. These are all payments that are irregular and not authorised by the Act.

“We also went into Gandawa’s personal account. In his personal account, that is where we discovered Zimdef money was put into Fuzzy Technologi­es and then they transferre­d $120 000 to Gandawa’s personal account. He then paid $70 000 towards a loan that he owed.

“These are people who are claiming that they used the money to fund ZANU-PF activities. It is a lie. They used it to fund themselves. Fuzzy Technologi­es is a company owned by Gandawa. I know who they paid and didn’t pay. There is no proof that money from Zimdef was used to fund any ZANU-PF activities,” said Commission­er Nguni.

He dismissed claims that officials from ZACC went to ZANU-PF Headquarte­rs during a Politburo meeting last week with the intention of arresting Prof Moyo.

He said they only wanted to interview him since he had been refusing to appear before them to answer to the allegation­s raised.

Comm Nguni dismissed claims that some commission­ers had been bribed to block investigat­ions into institutio­ns such as the Civil Aviation Authority of Zimbabwe and AB Communicat­ions.

He said there was no way a commission­er could have been bribed when they were not investigat­ing the two entities.

Comm Nguni also dismissed claims by Prof Moyo that he was behind the probe, saying investigat­ions were only approved by the full commission.

He refuted claims that he was a con- victed fraudster in South Africa, saying if it were true, he would not have qualified to be a commission­er of ZACC.

Responding to reports that he received $2 500, Mathuthu said, “I have become aware of utterances made by convicted fraudster Goodson Nguni, alleging that I corruptly received money from ZIMDEF. Nothing could be further from the truth. Following the Zimbabwe Internatio­nal Trade Fair in May, I was asked by ZIMDEF — in my profession­al capacity then as editor of the Chronicle — to coordinate a newspaper supplement in recognitio­n of their achievemen­ts as well as those of the parent ministry.

“Subsequent­ly, in a transparen­t business transactio­n, I put together editorial material — with the help of colleagues who were paid for their input — to design a supplement that was published by The Herald, Chronicle, The Daily News on Sunday, the Financial Gazette and The Standard. In the case of Zimpapers, the supplement earned the company in excess of $20 000.

“I billed ZIMDEF for the work done because beyond my own input, other colleagues contribute­d pictures and editorial material for which they had to be paid. I don’t reap where I did not sow and I’m troubled that a whole constituti­onal body like ZACC now cannot distinguis­h between a commercial transactio­n and corruption, clearly blinded by a political and malicious pursuit of myself as a private citizen.

“If I have committed a crime, ZACC knows what to do and I, as every Zimbabwean, knows what to do is not to have a rampaging, lone rogue commission­er calling Press conference­s to besmirch people who have done no wrong.”

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