CANADILE Miners boss Lovemore Kurotwi has upped his bid to
recover diamond mining equipment, cash and gemstones seized from his enterprise
by former mines and mining development minister, Obert Mpofu, whom he wants
investigated by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (Zacc).
Kurotwi has written to Zacc chairperson Justice Loice
Matanda-Moyo, asking the anti-corruption body to investigate Mpofu.
Kurotwi and Mpofu have had several run-ins since 2010 after
the former was arrested on charges of prejudicing the state of potential
revenue amounting to US$$2 billion.
The charges arose after Kurotwi was arrested on allegations
of defrauding the government. He was accused of misrepresenting to government
that Core Mining, in which he was a director, was a special purpose investment
vehicle of an internationally recognised mining giant, BSGR.
This resulted in the government partnering the company,
which the state said was an undeserving company to form Canadile Miners to mine
diamonds in Chiadzwa.
The case was thrown out by the courts for lack of
substance, while Kurotwi insisted he was being persecuted for failing to pay
Mpofu a US$10 million bribe.
“Having personally suffered unnecessarily as a result of
Mpofu’s corrupt abuse of office, I can safely say I have first-hand information
of what I think is Mpofu’s corrupt activities,” wrote Kurotwi in a letter dated
July 8, 2019 and stamped by Zacc as received on the same day.
“In 2009, I representing a company called Canadile Miners in
which I was a shareholder and director, applied for a licence to mine diamonds
in Chiadzwa. Obert Mpofu then asked me for a US$10 million bribe for my company
to get the licence.
“In fact, it is in the public domain that I told the then
president, Robert Mugabe in Obert Mpofu’s presence about this bribe.”
Kurotwi accused Mpofu of cooking up allegations of fraud
that resulted in his arrest as a way of spiting him for exposing him and his
alleged “corrupt” tendencies to Mugabe.
“Angry that I reported him to former president Mugabe,
Mpofu got me arrested on frivolous trumped up charges of fraud which, as you
would recall, were dismissed by the law courts as they acquitted me of this
trumped up criminal fraud charge.
“Mpofu ordered my arrest without any investigation having
been conducted. He unilaterally abused his position of power to order my
arrest,” Kurotwi added.
The diamond firm boss alleged that Mpofu confiscated mining
equipment which has not been traced to date.
“Taking advantage of my vulnerability, given the fact that
my case was based on trumped up charges and was still before the law courts,
Obert Mpofu went further to abuse his office by confiscating our mining
equipment worth US$14 million, 1,4 million carats (of diamonds) and cash
amounting to US$10,6 million which was with the Minerals Marketing Corporation
of Zimbabwe,” Kurotwi alleged.
“When Mpofu confiscated the above assets which belonged to
us as Canadile, there was no directive as to what would happen to the assets.
Everything was on Mpofu’s whim. This explains why, up to now, nobody knows of
the whereabouts of the assets except Mpofu himself.”
He said there was need for the anti-corruption commission
to probe the matter and establish what happened to the equipment.
“Therefore, as long as there is no knowledge of the
whereabouts of these assets, it is not preposterous to suggest theft of the
same assets by Mpofu and therefore, a thorough investigation of what happened
to these assets is being required,” Kurowti said.
Contacted for comment, Mpofu said he was not responsible
for the confiscation of Kurotwi’s equipment.
“I am not the right person to comment on that issue,” Mpofu
said. “You need to go back to government and check who took what and where they
put those things. Do you think it is possible for me to do what I am said to
have done? That issue was tabled in a court of law and representations were
made there. I think it’s not fair to keep on repeating the same things that
have been addressed.” Zimbabwe Independent
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