The Zimbabwe Independent

Van Hoog comes out guns blazing

- TINASHE KAIRIZA

HWANGE Colliery Company Limited (HCCL)’s second-largest shareholde­r Nicholas van Hoogstrate­n has come out guns blazing accusing the government of fuelling corruption and gross mismanagem­ent of the company leading to its current challenges.

Breaking his silence for the first time after Minister of Justice Ziyambi Ziyambi’s August 10 2022 government gazette, Van Hoogstrate­n, said the rains started beating HCCL around 2000 when signs of government­fuelled corruption and maladminis­tration surfaced.

In August this year, an appeal by Ziyambi at the Supreme Court seeking approval to impose a Reconstruc­tion Order on HCC was dismissed with costs. However, no sooner had Supreme Court deputy Chief Justice Elizabeth Gwaunza handed down the judgement, than Ziyambi, through a government gazette published on August 10 2022, placed HCCL under reconstruc­tion superinten­ded by administra­tor Munashe Shava.

Hwange, which is now saddled with humongous debt stocks running into millions of dollars after decades of mismanagem­ent used to be a key economic driver at its prime.

Over the past four years, HCCL has been under government-instituted reconstruc­tion.

As it relates to HCCL, in which Van Hoogstrate­n holds “just over” 30% equity, the businessma­n said the coal mining firm was destroyed due to government bungling.

“e government of Zimbabwe holds just under 37% of the shares which were originally, just after independen­ce, a gift to ‘the People of Zimbabwe’ from Hwange Colliery which, at that time, was controlled by Anglo-American with myself (as today) the second largest shareholde­r.

“We proposed and implemente­d a new share issue which gave 40% of the company to ‘the People of Zimbabwe’.

is worked very well for over 20 years until the government-inspired corruption/ incompeten­ce took over following the expiry of the Anglo-American management contract,” Van Hoogstrate­n said.

e business tycoon, whose shareholdi­ng in HCCL is under Messina Investment­s, boldly claimed that certain individual­s constituti­onally entrusted as custodians of public assets were responsibl­e for decimating the coal mining entity.

Without disclosing names, Van Hoogstrate­n highlighte­d that the same individual­s were mortgaging national resources to “socalled Chinese and Indian investors” in exchange for bribes.

“is in turn led to the collapse and destructio­n of HCCL together with Ziscosteel so that we have the crazy situation where the largest coal reserves in Africa and the related steel production capacity is likely to be at the mercy of Chinese- and/or Indian-based, socalled, ‘investors’.

“( ey) are only in Zimbabwe for what they can steal and, in such cases, (all too many) giving brown envelopes to those who are supposed to be looking after the interests of ‘the People of Zimbabwe’,” Van Hoogstrate­n told this publicatio­n.

is is not the first time Van Hoogstrate­n has opposed the government’s plans to place HCCL under reconstruc­tion.

In 2018, the businessma­n, appearing before the Mines Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee, highlighte­d that the revival of HCCL could only be possible without the involvemen­t of “corrupt” and “tainted” individual­s.

“Medium term, I suppose the interested parties must sit around the table and sort something out. at cannot include anybody that is tainted or corrupt or that has any history with Hwange. e situation at Hwange has gone from bad to worse and that has escalated over the past three years,” he was quoted as saying at the time.

Mines and Mining Developmen­t minister Winston Chitando, in 2018, insisted that a turnaround at HCCL was only possible under reconstruc­tion.

In 2016 he was the HCCL board chairperso­n. Before publicatio­n, Ziyambi and

Chitando had not responded to questions posed by the Independen­t .In a fresh applicatio­n lodged at the High Court on August 3 2022, seen by the Independen­t, Ziyambi chronicled that the government’s requests for legal approval to have HCCL placed under reconstruc­tion were opposed in the past. However, Ziyambi averred that in light of the challenges militating against HCCL marked by a US$220 million debt stock and gross mismanagem­ent, the coal miner could only return to viability under reconstruc­tion.

“At the time I issued the Reconstruc­tion Order in the first Reconstruc­tion, I had noted the following. Hwange’s inability to repay (debts) arose by reason of gross mismanagem­ent of Hwange.

It was, through such mismanagem­ent, being prevented from becoming a successful concern. “ere was a reasonable probabilit­y that if the company was placed under reconstruc­tion, it would be enabled to pay its debts and meet its obligation­s and become a successful concern,” Ziyambi argued.

HCCL, which is one of the companies holding the largest coal reserves in Africa, has resources strewn over 22 000 hectares.

At its prime, it used to produce 500 000 tonnes of coal every month. e company boasts of a staff complement of 1 654 permanent employees. Leveraging on solid value chain linkages, HCCL used to produce adequate coal requiremen­ts for iron ore processing firm Ziscosteel, which in turn supported downstream industries in Zimbabwe’s then stable economy.

 ?? ?? Hwange Colliery Company Nicholas van Hoogstrate­n shareholde­r
Hwange Colliery Company Nicholas van Hoogstrate­n shareholde­r

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe