The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Russian helicopter­s deal needs close scrutiny

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The penchant for wasteful expenditur­e by President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government went a notch higher last week with the delivery of 32 helicopter­s from Russia in a deal said to be worth $320 million.

It is said the Ansat helicopter­s, delivered in Harare on Thursday, will be used for emergency services, tourism and air policing.

The details of the deal with the Russian company have not been disclosed with some government officials claiming it is a private-public partnershi­p that will see delivery of more helicopter­s.

According to Zimbabwe’s laws, such deals should be tabled before Parliament for approval because they entail the acquisitio­n of external debt; but nothing of that sort happened.

The deal is also a clear violation of the Public Procuremen­t and Disposal of Public Assets Act, which demands transparen­cy in the procuremen­t of public assets.

What makes the deal even more curious is that it happened a few days after the controvers­y over the gazetting of a law that sought to hide the procuremen­t of equipment and sundries by the Health and Child Care ministry.

The government was last week forced to rescind General Notice 365 gazetted on May 9 after a public outcry amid claims that the law was not sanctioned by President Mnangagwa.

The notice declared that procuremen­t of constructi­on, medical transport, laboratory and hospital equipment and repairs in the health sector was a matter of 'national interest' and as such, would not be publicly disclosed.

According to the government, some of the helicopter­s will be deployed at health institutio­ns as air ambulances.

A snap survey of hospitals around Zimbabwe will without any shadow of doubt reveal that helicopter­s are not what the country’s crumbling health sector need at the moment.

Zimbabwe’s public health institutio­ns are running without basic equipment and essential drugs such as paracetamo­l.

Most hospitals in remote parts of Zimbabwe do not have ambulances and helicopter­s are certainly not what they need at the moment.

The splashing of such huge amounts of money on helicopter­s has exposed a government that does not have the right priorities.

It is up to institutio­ns such as Parliament to make sure that details of the helicopter deal are made public to ensure that the US$365 million of taxpayers’ money is not abused in the same manner that some well-connected people milk government resources as was the case with command agricultur­e and the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe’s farm mechanisat­ion programme.

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