The Zimbabwe Independent

Ziyambi defies court on Hwange Colliery

- SYDNEY KAWADZA

JUSTICE, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs minister Ziyambi Ziyambi has defied the Supreme Court by appointing Munashe Shava as the administra­tor for Hwange Colliery Company Limited (HCCL) despite the Court recently dismissing his appeal seeking approval to impose a Reconstruc­tion Order on the coal miner.

e government holds a 52% stake in the coal mining entity, whose debt obligation­s stood at US$333 million owed to various creditors as at December 31 2016.

Ziyambi’s appeal at the Supreme Court was dismissed with costs but the minister on August 10 2022 issued a General Notice in an Extraordin­ary Government Gazette announcing the appointmen­t of Shava and Mutsa Mollie Jean Remba as assistant administra­tor.

Shava is the chief operations officer at the Great Dyke Investment­s (Pvt) Limited while Remba is a partner at Dube, Manikai and Hwacha legal practition­ers in Harare.

Ziyambi also issued a Notice of Intention for Applicatio­n of Confirmati­on of the Reconstruc­tion Order at the HCCL with the intention of making an applicatio­n to the High Court, in chambers, seeking an order affirming the reconstruc­tion order he issued on August 5 this year.

Under the General Notice 1794A of 2022 on the Reconstruc­tion Order of HCCL Reconstruc­tion, Ziyambi announced Shava and Remba’s appointmen­ts directing that HCCL be under the control and management of the administra­tor from the date of the publicatio­n of the gazette.

“e boards of the companies under constructi­on shall be divested of the control and management of the companies’ affairs. “Any person managing and controllin­g the company’s affairs in any capacity other than simply as a member of the board referred above shall continue in the office subject to the control and direction or and direction of and be answerable to the administra­tors,” Ziyambi said in the notice.

Besides the Supreme Court judgement, under reference number SC67/22, Ziyambi had initially filed an applicatio­n at the High Court on February 12 2020, seeking confirmati­on of the Reconstruc­tion Order.

e High Court dismissed Ziyambi’s applicatio­n with costs, prompting him to appeal to the Supreme Court.

e impact of the Reconstruc­tion Order, which was announced in an Extraordin­ary Gazette on October 31 2018, resulted in the dissolutio­n of the enterprise’s board.

Following the announceme­nt of the Reconstruc­tion Order four years ago, Ziyambi appointed Bekithemba Moyo as the company’s administra­tor, whose responsibi­lity was to ostensibly steer the loss-making coal miner back to profitabil­ity under the reconstruc­tion exercise.

Shava assistants.

Relating to the latest Supreme Court ruling handed down by Deputy Chief Justice Elizabeth Gwaunza, she struck off the roll, Ziyambi’s appeal with costs, highlighti­ng that the minister acted “contrary” to the relevant statute when he placed the company under reconstruc­tion.

Justices Samuel Kudya and Nicholas Mathonsi also sat on the Supreme Court bench.

“e order which the minister issued 17 months into the scheme of arrangemen­t no doubt violates Section 2 (a) of the Act. It is trite that an order which is issued in direct violation of the law stands on no leg. It is a nullity.

“Similarly, an applicatio­n which is premised on a nullity cannot stand. Nothing begets nothing . It is by parity of reasoning, evident that the applicatio­n which the minister made to confirm a nullity cannot stand. It will simply collapse,” the Supreme Court judgement read.

In passing the judgement, the Supreme Court judges emphasised that Ziyambi’s appeal applicatio­n was bound to crumble “on the basis that the foundation upon which it is predicated does not exist. e court, in other words, cannot confirm a nothing”.

Ziyambi, who is cited as the appellant, was represente­d by embinkosi Magwaliba while the respondent­s, Juliana Muswe, Ntombizodw­a Masuku, Edward Tome and Messina Investment­s were represente­d by abani Mpofu.

Muswe, Masuku and Tome are board members of the embattled company. Businessma­n Nicholas van Hoogstrate­n is also one of HCCL’s major shareholde­rs through Messina and

Remba, served as

Moyo’s

Investment­s.

Andrew Lawson, a chartered accountant, was the scheme chairperso­n and a trustee appointed by creditors to represent their interests, is cited as the fourth respondent in the court case.

Prior to Ziyambi’s moves to impose a Reconstruc­tion Order on HCCL, the company’s shareholde­rs and creditors had agreed on a Scheme of Arrangemen­t whose sole purpose was to raise fresh capital, restructur­e management and rescheduli­ng and settling debt. e scheme was led by Lawson.

As part of the court case proceeding­s, culminatin­g in the judgement, the judges weighed that Ziyambi’s submission premised on the view that placing HCCL under reconstruc­tion would save the company from total collapse.

“e scheme had failed to turn around the fortunes of Hwange due to mismanagem­ent for which the directors were ultimately responsibl­e. He was impelled by the exigencies of the situation to act with speed to protect the public investment and a national strategic asset.

“Being the largest shareholde­r and creditor, the government of Zimbabwe could not countenanc­e the delays associated with the legal process for the dissolutio­n of the scheme that was specified in the trust deed to which it was a party,” Ziyambi’s legal counsel had argued.

But, the respondent­s countered Ziyambi’s averments, noting that the decision to place HCCL under reconstruc­tion was illegal and meant to dismantle the company’s board, hence prejudicin­g its shareholde­rs.

“e respondent­s took several preliminar­y points against the confirmati­on of the Reconstruc­tion Order. e directors and the fifth respondent contended that Part II of the Act violated the provisions of Section 56(1) (the equality and right to equal protection clause), 68(1) (the right to administra­tive justice clause), 69(1) (right to a fair hearing before an independen­t and impartial tribunal clause) and 71(1) (the right to the protection of private property) of the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe.

“ey contended that the power reposed in the government of Zimbabwe by the impugned provisions to act as both a prosecutor and a judge in its own cause and to unilateral­ly circumvent the audi alteram partem rule was inconsiste­nt with these constituti­onal provisions.

ey further contended that the applicatio­n did not disclose a cause of action in the face of an extant court order sanctionin­g the scheme,” reads the judgement.

e aggrieved respondent­s, who opposed Ziyambi’s plans to place HCCL under judicial management, underscore­d that the minister was abusing his authority by passing orders which only favoured a single shareholde­r being government. After assessing the submission­s by the contending parties, the Supreme Court Justices dismissed Ziyambi’s applicatio­n, citing that it lacked merit.

At its prime, HCCL used to consistent­ly supply coal to the Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) for the generation of 400MW of electricit­y and to commerce, industry and agricultur­e.

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