THE owner of a Zimbabwean company selected by FBC Holdings to renew the security licence for its emails allegedly took the advance payment of almost $28 million needed to push the transaction through the auction system and spent it.
Morden Niche Digital Consulting and its director Mark
Tanyaradzwa Maraire yesterday appeared at the Harare magistrates court on
allegations of defrauding FBC Holdings of $27 857 850.
Maraire and his company were not asked to plead to the
charges when they appeared before magistrate Mrs Evelyn Mashavakure, who remanded them to February 16.
Maraire is the majority shareholder of Modern Niche Digital
Consulting Africa Private Limited and the sole signatory to the company’s bank
account, the State alleges.
On August 11 last year, FBC engaged Maraire and his company
for renewal of the bank’s email security licence. The court heard FBC Holdings
was satisfied that Maraire’s company was registered as partners of Proof Point,
the British company that provides the licence. The deal was done well in time
as the FBC lience was due to expire in September last year.
Maraire and his company allegedly quoted $27 857 850 but
needed prepayment. On October 14 FBC Holdings
transferred $27 857 850 into Morden’s FBC Bank account for an
application to the Reserve Bank auctions and pay for Proof Point security system
services to be made. The auction system requires applicants to have the local
currency in their bank account, and to supply the invoice so that the foreign
currency is transferred to the foreign payee.
But when the money flowed into the Morden account, Maraire
did not apply for foreign currency at RBZ as expected, but instead allegedly
converted all the money to his own use. Herald
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