
The James Matola Foundation, which is believed be owned by
former footballer James Matola and his wife Ayanda Brown, was allegedly taking
money from unsuspecting young Zimbabweans for the past four years.
James Matola Foundation acted as an agent to a white man in
Canada, known as Brad Bino, and asked students and young professionals to
deposit money in United States dollars into their bank account as registration
fees to travel to South Africa for an indaba, get their visas processed, have
flight tickets bought and fly to Canada thereafter.
“I joined James Matola Foundation last year. I was told to
deposit US$175 as registration fee, considering I was promised to get a nursing
job in Canada,” a sales representative of a Harare-based company, who preferred
to speak on condition of anonymity, said.
He said they had promised to take him along with his family
to Canada.
“I was so excited when I was told the arrangement was to
take me along with my wife and children. Since I joined this foundation, they
have been promising to hold a workshop with us firstly in Harare and then in
Pretoria, and then leave for Canada. When they were not showing up, I began to
suspect the foundation was not genuine,” the Harare man said.
The sales representative said the planned trip has cost him
thousands of dollars, as he even went to the extent of selling his
Mercedes-Benz vehicle to cover bus fares and accommodation.
“We were supposed to attend an indaba in SA, of which bus
fares, meals and accommodation were not catered for. So, I thought it wise to
sell my car to cover the costs. To date, that meeting has not been held and
Ayanda has been giving excuses that the white man from Canada is not showing
up,” he said.
Several young people were on Wednesday left stranded in Harare
after they were invited for a meeting at the Harare International Conference
Centre (HICC), which never took place.
“Yesterday (Tuesday), Brown told us on WhatsApp that we
were going to meet in Harare, but she did not divulge any information concerning
the venue. It was not until in the morning (Wednesday) when she told us to
converge at HICC for the meeting,” a young female, who was promised a
scholarship, said.
“We tried to call them, but they were not reachable and
unavailable on WhatsApp. To our surprise, there was no one from James Matola
Foundation who showed up and the hotel staff chased us from the HICC. We
requested to see the manager, who then told us that James Matola Foundation had
not even booked for a conference room at HICC.”
A young man from Chitungwiza told NewsDay that he was
promised greener pastures in Canada.
“I heard about the foundation and they told me to pay
US$80, provide them with a police clearance and my passport details for me to
grab an opportunity to go and work in Canada as a builder and I gave them,” he
said. “They said they were looking for about 200 people, so they asked me to
convince my friends and relatives to join the foundation, which I did.”
The Chitungwiza resident said over 400 had joined the
foundation and they were separated into three WhatsApp groups.
Voice and text messages in possession of NewsDay from Brown
addressed to students, general hand workers and young professionals, said everyone
would be going to SA on Wednesday.
“Please note that all groups are going. Another group will
spend six days in SA and leave for Canada on the seventh day. Nurse and
construction people will spend three days in SA and leave on their fourth day,”
Brown said.
NewsDay understands that some people had resigned from
their work positions, while students were withdrawn from schools thinking they
were leaving for Canada. Some had given notices to vacate their rented
accommodation.
Both James and Ayanda were not reachable by the time of
going to print last night and they have been offline on WhatsApp since
Wednesday morning. Newsday
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