THREE top NatPharm bosses yesterday appeared in court
facing allegations of approving DRAX International LLC to supply and deliver
medicines and surgical sundries to the Government without following procurement
procedures.
Florah Nancy Sifeku (67), Charles Mwaramba (78) and Rolland
Mlalazi (55) appeared at the Harare Magistrates’ Courts charged with criminal
abuse of office.
Sifeku is the NatPharm managing director, Mlalazi is
employed as finance manager, while Mwaramba is the pharmaceutical company’s
operations manager.
They were all not asked to plead to the charges when they
separately appeared before magistrate Ms Vongai Guriro, who remanded them to
July 3 on $10 000 bail each.
Sifeku and Mwaramba are jointly charged on one of the
offences where the State alleges that sometime in December 2019, the Permanent
Secretary in the Ministry of Health and Child Care gave a directive to NatPharm
to perform a tender.
DRAX Consult SAGL had written a letter of interest to
supply Zimbabwe with medicine and surgical sundries under a US$20 million
facility.
Allegations are that Sifeku and Mwaramba allegedly
disregarded the Permanent Secretary’s directive and went on to award a direct
purchase to Drax Consult SAGL, saying there was extreme emergency.
Sifeku and Mwaramba are alleged to have fast-tracked the
awarding of a tender to Drax Consult SAGL to supply the medicines and surgical
sundries.
The duo allegedly withheld the tender documents for a
month, while they were processing another tender for the same company under a
loan facility.
Sifeku and Mwaramba are alleged to have used the two
tenders to award and sign a contract for Drax Consult SAGL under the loan
facility of US$20 million to supply medicines and surgical sundries.
Drax Consult SAGL is said to have supplied US$2.7 million
of which US$2 million out of the total amount was for performance guarantee
after it failed to secure one from European banks.
After realising that Drax Consult SAGL had failed to supply
the medicine and sundries within three months as per the agreed contract,
Sifeku and Mwaramba allegedly deliberately failed to cancel the contract for
non-performance.
On another matter in which Sifeku and Mlalazi are jointly
charged, the State alleges that sometime early this year, Health Minister
Obadiah Moyo was approached by Delish Nguwaya and ILir Dedja, who introduced
themselves to him as Drax International LLC’s country representative and legal
representative, respectively.
Nguwaya and Dedja are said to have tendered an expression
of interest, saying their company had a capacity to supply medicines to
Zimbabwe through a US$40 million loan facility.
Minister Moyo is said to have asked the then permanent
secretary Dr Agnes Mahomva to process the offer.
Dr Mahomva is said to have advised Sifeku and Mlalazi to
procure the medicines according to the procurement procedures.
The State alleges that knowing that Drax International LLC
had changed its name to Drax Consult SAGL and previously known as Papi Pharma
and had also failed the vetting, Sifeku and Mlalazi went on to offer it another
tender to supply US$13 351 071 worth of medicines.
On April 9, 2020, the permanent secretary in the Ministry
of Finance Mr George Guvamatanga wrote a letter to Dr Mahomva after noting that
Sifeku and Mlalazi had entered into an agreement with Drax International LLC.
Dr Mahomva, on the following day, responded to the letter
saying they had not given NatPharm the green light to sign the contract.
Acting on the contract, Drax International LLC is said to
have supplied 3 740 pieces of coverall protection, CatIII type 6B worth US$336
600, 5 040 N95 masks worth US$141 120 and 15 000 pieces of SARS COV2 test kits
for US$510 000.
In another case where Sifeku is appearing on her own, the
State had it that sometime in March 2019, Minister Moyo was approached by
Nguwaya with a letter of interest to supply the country with medicines through
a US$15 million loan facility.
Minister Moyo is said to have referred the letter to the
former permanent secretary Dr Gerald Gwinji.
On April 11, 2019, Dr Gwinji is said to have written to
Sifeku recommending NatPharm to work with 65 product lines of medicines worth
US$9.4 million and negotiate the prices downwards.
In the same letter, NatPharm was directed to come up with
comparative international prices for the products and apply for necessary
waiver from the Procurement Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe.
Sifeku, without drawing the comparative international price
schedule and waiting for due vetting process for PAPI Pharma, allegedly went on
to sign the agreement to supply medicines worth US$6 306 115.
Mr Charles Muchemwa represented the State. Herald
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