The Zimbabwe Independent

CSC in bid to recoup US$34m debt

- TINA SHE KAI RIZA

COLD Storage Company (CSC) corporate rescue manager Vonani Majoko is planning to institute legal action against the parastatal’s debtors to recoup an estimated US$34 million owed it by mostly Zanu PF bigwigs.

As revealed by the Zimbabwe Independen­t’s CSC investigat­ive series over the past few weeks, some of the leases have not been serviced for years resulting in the ballooning debt.

The investigat­ion, supported by the Informatio­n Developmen­t Trust (IDT), revealed that a cast of 247 lessees, dominated by Zanu PF top officials are in rental arrears, consequent­ly, revenue collection­s tumbled from US$1,2 million to US$150 000. IDT is a non-profit organisati­on helping the media to probe corruption and bad governance.

With CSC now under a corporate rescue programme which will run for 60 days since the appointmen­t of Majoko on April 2, 2021, the entity is looking to return to profitabil­ity by recouping rental arrears, among a range of strategies.

The CSC unaudited debtors’ list, which was seen by the Independen­t, shows that Zanu PF secretary for administra­tion Obert Mpofu accrued US$32 273,20 as at December 32, 2017 for renting Winterbloc­k Ranch measuring 2 000m2 under a 35-year lease agreement. The amount owed is now a subject of Majoko’s verificati­on, after which a report will be submitted to stakeholde­rs spelling out strategies for reviving Africa’s once largest integrated meat processing firm.

Majoko said those who owed CSC would be engaged while legal action remains a possible option.

Majoko said: “There is a debt that was covered by the scheme of arrangemen­t which was US$33,1 million in 2019. However, in between, some debts arose. You now need to go through schedules and contact the people who appear on the papers to get their input.

“At this stage we have figures that are there in the report but I have not yet tested them. The people have a right to be heard before we can settle on a figure. If people owe us, we have to resort to legal process. We need to engage them; if they can come up with a plan to pay, they can pay immediatel­y. We have to take steps, to recover as much as we can.”

The corporate rescue manager, who earlier this month told this publicatio­n that there would be no “sacred cows” in his quest to recoup what CSC is owed said, among those appearing on the debtors’ list, he had contacted Mpofu and Jabulani Nkomo (who took over the estate of former vice-president John Landa Nkomo).

Nkomo entered a 35-year lease agreement with CSC in 2005 for a 2 000m2 property for US$252 per month.

“For example, you phoned Obert Mpofu the other day and he said he does not owe. You also phoned Jabu Nkomo and he said he does not owe. At this stage we have figures that are there in the report but I have not yet tested them,” Majoko said.

“It is a matter of public interest. I did get in touch with them and in some cases that indebtedne­ss is disputed. So, I now have to go back to the source document. Have we done something about it, yes we have contacted them.”

Other individual­s on the CSC debtors’ list include an M Cheda who accumulate­d US$9 050 in arrears for renting a property listed under Winterbloc­k Ranch. At the same time, former CSC chief executive officer Ngoni Chinogaram­ombe had accumulate­d US$15 000 in arrears as part of his 35-year lease agreement to rent a 2 000m2 property. Chinogaram­ombe, however, said he did not owe the beleaguere­d meat processing firm anything, highlighti­ng that “as part of my retrenchme­nt package I am not paying rentals anymore as from July 2019”.

In an interview a fortnight ago, Chinogaram­ombe said he last paid in June 2019. Mpofu also denied owing CSC.

“I do not owe CSC. What is wrong with leasing a property? If I owed them, they should have come to me. I left CSC three years ago,” Mpofu told the Independen­t last month.

Under the debt owed to CSC, Majoko said a component of it was constitute­d by “foreign debt.”

At the time of going to print, and subject to verificati­on by the corporate rescue manager, it could not be ascertaine­d how much constitute­s the foreign debt.

In June 2017, as documents seen by the Independen­t showed, an account registered as WAR 001 being a “War Veterans Trust” owed US$10 346,92.

The same documents also shows that by July 31, 2019 Dumisani Edward Msika, who took over the 35-year lease agreements following the death of former vice-president Joseph Msika was owing US$2 664,80.

Msika, who was vice-president between 1999 and 2009, was renting a property also measuring 2 000m2 for a monthly fee of US$298.

To avert liquidatio­n, CSC was placed under a corporate rescue plan, which is now led by prominent Bulawayo lawyer Majoko.

As part of this running investigat­ive series into the dramatic collapse of CSC, this newspaper on February 2, 2021, revealed how a consortium of local industrial­ists and companies — CSC 2016 — is angling to take over the defunct company through a US$225 million bid.

CSC 2016 was authorised by the government to evaluate assets belonging to the meat processor despite a contract still running between the state and Boustead Beef Limited.

Last month, Boustead Beef presented itself as a creditor owed ZW$3,2 billion by the state enterprise. The debt was provisiona­lly accepted during the creditors’ meeting that was presided over by the deputy Master of High Court, Rose Dube.

Documents gleaned by this publicatio­n this week show that Boustead Beef roped in Jiang Su Be Import and Export Limited of China on September 6, 2019 as a guarantor which has committed to avail €50 million (US$60 million) meant to be injected into the moribund state enterprise.

 ??  ?? Zanu PF secretary for administra­tion Obert Mpofu
Zanu PF secretary for administra­tion Obert Mpofu

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