A PARLIAMENTARY privileges committee set up to investigate
allegations that Norton MP, Temba Mliswa and three other legislators, solicited
for a $400 000 bribe from a businessman has revealed how controversial Kwekwe
businessman Shepherd Tundiya was the main architect of the scam.
Tundiya is accused of trying to extract the bribe from
Bulawayo businessman, James Goddard ostensibly on behalf of the four MPs.
The other MPs, who were implicated were Binga North MP
Prince Dubeko Sibanda (MDC), Magwegwe MP Anele Ndebele (MDC), and Gokwe
Kabuyuni MP Leonard Chikomba (Zanu PF), but they have all since been cleared by
Parliament.
The MPs were then members of the mines portfolio committee,
and it was alleged that they had promised to award Goddard lucrative contracts
with Hwange Colliery Company Limited (HCCL) on condition he parted with $400
000.
Parliament’s privileges committee chairperson Fortune
Charumbira who presented the report on investigations into the issue in the
National Assembly last week said during the probe Tundiya was described as a
‘conman’.
Tundiya was also implicated in a forensic audit report on
HCCL carried out by Reynolds Tendai Muza.
He was accused of extorting HCCL of1003 tonnes of coal
worth US$17 000, which he was supposed to deliver to the Zimbabwe Power Company
but he converted it to personal use.
Tundiya also allegedly masqueraded as an official in the
Office of the President and Cabinet (OPC) who was sent by President Emmerson
Mnangagwa to sort out the mess at the coal mine.
His company Avim Investments owed HCCL of US$481 225, 20 as
at September 30 2018.
“Tundiya was the architect of the entire bribery
allegations, and he arranged the meetings between Goddard and management at
HCCL, and he held two meetings with Chikomba, Ndebele and Sibanda at Bronte
Hotel in Harare, but Mliswa did not attend those meetings,” Charumbira said.
“Tundiya was again the convener of the meeting of November
15 2018 at Goddard’s Borrowdale offices, and he was described as a ‘conman’ by
Mliswa and his role in these bribery allegations appears to lend credence to
that description.” .
The committee said while Tundiya wanted to set a mining
contract for Goddard at HCCL, he secured meetings for the businessman with the
mines committee MPs, and he also owed Chikomba money, which he could have
wanted Goddard to pay on his behalf.
“In the submission, the amount he owed Chikomba was either
US$1600 or US$2100 but the evidence is unclear as to the circumstances and
origin of the debt in question,” the committee said.
During investigations by the committee, Tundiya is said to
have changed his oral testimony, and the MPs also doubted why Goddard in his
wisdom as a businessman would travel at night all the way from Shangani to
Harare after being invited by Tundiya to meet the four MPs with the belief that
they could secure a mining contract for him in Hwange.
While the four MPs were absolved of the bribery allegations
as the committee could not come up with evidence to show they indeed tried to
extort $400 000 from Goddard, their alliance with Tundiya cost them their
membership of the mines committee where they were the most vocal legislators.
The MPs were punished for holding meetings with Goddard at
night, purporting that they were doing Parliament business.
“The privileges committee is of the view that the conduct
of the four MPs does not constitute a breach of privileges,” the report said.
“However, the committee is of the view that measures should
be undertaken to ensure MPs are not involved in activities, which are
inconsistent with parliamentary decorum.
“As a deterrence measure the committee recommends that the
four MPs should be prohibited from seating in the mines portfolio committee for
the rest of the Ninth Parliament; that they should prepare and deliver a
statement of apology to Parliament, and that a one seating’s allowance should
be withheld from the four MPs.” Standard
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