The Zimbabwe Independent

Nguwaya resurfaces in a waste deal that stinks to high heaven

- Twitter: @MuckrakerZ­im

“ is company has activated a Non Mailing Indicator (NMI) to indicate that they do not wish to receive unsolicite­d mail or sales visits. eir registered address should not be used for this purpose.”

THE GeoGenix BV-City of Harare deal signed on Wednesday this week stinks to high heaven. e deal in which the foreign company will supposedly invest €303,9 million (approximat­ely US$344 million) to convert the Pomona dump site in Harare into a modern waste management facility that will also generate a bit of electricit­y is shrouded in mystery.

Until this week Zimbabwean­s were made to believe the company was from Germany; all reports, including those from the City of Harare informatio­n department itself said the company was German.

But this week as the city signed the memorandum of agreement in the presence of no less a person than Minister of Local Government himself July Moyo, we were told the company was from e Netherland­s.

A look on the internet to find out who this outfit is hit a brick wall, well not quite. Written on their wall is this: “ is company has activated a Non Mailing Indicator (NMI) to indicate that they do not wish to receive unsolicite­d mail or sales visits. eir registered address should not be used for this purpose.”

row in the mix one Delish Nguwaya, described in the deal as the Dutch company’s country representa­tive in Zimbabwe and then you know where this stinking deal is coming from.

Zimbabwe will remember Nguwaya from another stinking deal in which he courted another shadowy company from Europe to supply Covid-19 equipment and medication. It did not end well. But who really is Delish? Is he a son-in-law to some important family or something? Time will tell!

Son-in-law

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa was in Kenya this week on a state visit ostensibly to strengthen bilateral relations between Zimbabwe and the East African country. It is reported several MoUs were signed. All very good. At the tail end of his tête-à-tête with his Kenyan counterpar­t Uhuru Kenyatta (UK), Muckraker’s mole overheard the following:

ED: (rubbing his palms together) en there is the small matter of your famous son-in-law.

UK: (with faked puzzlement): Oh, you mean Jonso (Jonathan Moyo)?

ED: (with a salivating smile): Exactly. Can I have him back for a while?

UK: (With concern in his voice): You mean if I give him to you, he will come back alive?

ED: (with a wry smile): I hope so.

Fuel prices

THE prices of fuel have gone up again and will keep going up almost weekly for the foreseeabl­e future.

THE reason: the Russia-Ukraine war whose end is not in sight. Even if it ends tomorrow the disruption it has caused to the supply of fuel around the world will be felt for a long time to come.

But for the Zimbabwe government, which has always wished to keep the price of fuel way ahead of its regional counterpar­ts, the war has come at the right time. e government has always fleeced its citizens of their hardearned money through punitive fuel taxes which no other country in the world charges.

Cynically, Energy minister Soda Water has added effervesce­nce to the issue. He has advised Zimbabwean­s to use Zupco buses instead of driving to work. Fair enough if these were available and efficient.

Everyone knows the buses’ primary purpose, namely to pick up people at the usual pick-up points and ferry them to rallies addressed by the country’s owner.

Now with the election season in full swing, these buses will spend days on the road far away from those who need to get to work and back.

Invictus diesel

IF the Invictus Energy thing was not just another “diesel in Chinhoyi” hoax the country would urge it to speed up the drilling of wells so that Zimbabwe does not have to depend on Russia and Ukraine for its fuel.

Muckraker is reliably informed that there is nothing happening in the Cahora Bassa basin in the form of oil exploratio­n. If there is, Invictus should do the right thing and organise a media tour of the area.

What news organisati­ons are reporting are simply press statements from Invictus. I dare them to invite journalist­s to Muzarabani so they see for themselves what’s happening (or not happening) there.

Voters’ roll ferrets

IT was great to hear Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) putative president Nelson Chamisa saying there was now no way the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) was going to cheat them again because the party has planted its people in all important places, including in Zec.

Of course, he could be right seeing how the voters’ roll was leaked to Pachedu, a group of pro-CCC ferrets interested in analysing the roll. Pachedu has exposed some very damning shenanigan­s employed to doctor the roll, including moving hundreds of thousands of voters from their constituen­cies to other ones without their knowledge.

But now that Chamisa has his own people in Zec, it means according to him, the coming elections will be “free and fair”. He said it himself, not Muckraker.

Porn hoax

MANY companies across the globe are sanctionin­g Russia because of its invasion of a “sovereign” country Ukraine. ere was panic across the length and breadth of the huge country of 144 million people of which nearly 70 million are men when one interestin­g company said it would not extend its services to Russia.

PornHub, a free sex videos website, popular in the country, had reportedly blocked Russia and the outcry was virile. ere was a heavy sigh of relief, however, when it later emerged the news was a mere spoof.

 ?? ?? Stinking deal ...  e Harare City Council has entered into a US$344 million deal with a shadowy foreign company for waste management at Pomona.
Stinking deal ... e Harare City Council has entered into a US$344 million deal with a shadowy foreign company for waste management at Pomona.
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