The Zimbabwe Independent

Property tycoon opens up on stillborn Airport Road project

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From A1 a lot.”

The tycoon said at that point, Harare became confident and proposed that he take on the much bigger highway deal.

“They came to us and said you have the resources,” Sharpe said. “We don't have access to foreign currency. Can you do another project as part of the joint venture? That is when we were invited to build the airport highway. Initially, they said it was a US$6 million or US$7 million contract. We looked at it and we said fine, we have got the money. But how will we get the money back?

“Initially, the idea was to link it to a toll road, collect toll fees in the joint venture. But they discovered they couldn’t do it because it is a national highway. National highways have to be owned by the Ministry of Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t. The Minister of Transport got involved. We went to meet him, and we met the Minister of Local Government.

“Eventually, we formulated a plan that if we built this road, they would pay us with land. It was a barter arrangemen­t. We signed a MoA (memorandum of agreement) and then went to present the plans to the President (the late Robert Mugabe). The

President said ‘we don't want to extend this road. We need a proper highway’. We went back to the drawing board. We came up with a number, US$82 million. More than half of the value of the contract was bridges. And the bridges have not even been built.”

Sharpe said as the project kicked off, he and his team were still asking how Harare would pay.

Harare then suggested it would allocate land banks to the multimilli­onaire.

“We started building the road and all along we were saying how are you going to pay us? They showed us some land, but it was not zoned. The change of use hadn't been done in some cases and in some cases, there were contentiou­s issues of wetlands on the land. For example, at Borrowdale Millennium Heights, in Millennium Park. But we took the risk and started building the road. We eventually spent about US$20 million on it. It took a long time. After spending US$20 million, we still had almost just enough land to cover half of the contract so we knew we couldn't go beyond because we wouldn't get paid,” Sharpe said.

He said it was at that point that Harare “unilateral­ly” cancelled the transactio­n.

“They unilateral­ly cancelled the agreement. In terms of the contract, they should have given us a period to remedy if there were some concerns. They just cancelled outright and said get off and they took it over as Zinara and they finished that section of the road we were doing. But they didn't complete the bridges. More than half of the road hasn't been done. We took them to court. We won at arbitratio­n. We then went to High Court and then went to Supreme Court but eventually, we settled with them out of court.

“Since then, we have got our zoning, our permits have been issued and we are building and constructi­ng. The airport deal that was a barter deal 100%. We got paid land for the work we did. For all the work we did, there was a certified payment, interim payments certificat­e that would be called an IPC which is basically measuring the works and saying this is the amount of work in dollars,” Sharpe said.

“Then, we would equate that in land and they would give us the land. At the end of that process, we owned a whole chunk of land. Whilst that was going on, we also had the PPP (public private partnershi­p), which is Sunshine Developmen­ts and in that PPP we had three pieces of land,” he added. •See

full interview on Page 12.

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