Mugabe hits hard times 

Source: Mugabe hits hard times – DailyNews Live

Tendai Kamhungira      1 June 2018

HARARE – A company owned by former president Robert Mugabe has been
dragged to the High Court for failing to pay over $174 000 for potato seed
acquired on credit in 2015.

According to court papers, in July 2015, Seed Potato Co-op (Private)
Limited entered into a verbal agreement with Gushungo Holdings, owned by
the former first family, in terms of which the former was to supply
Mugabe’s company with potato seed on credit at a unit cost of $30 per
pocket.

Between July 21, 2015 and September 24, 2015, it is being alleged that
Seed Potato Co-op made 11 deliveries of the product to various farms owned
by Gushungo Holdings.

A total of 12 761 pockets of potato seed worth $382 830 were delivered
during the period to farms listed as Mwenewazvo, Gushungo Dairy,
Highfield, Vusumuzi, Kaseplan and Iron Mask.

Seed Potato Co-op is the applicant in the matter while Gushungo Holdings
is cited as the respondent.

“Accordingly, defendant is currently owing the balance in the sum of $174
193, exclusive of interest. Despite several demands, defendant has
neglected, failed and/or refused to pay plaintiff the sum of its
indebtedness,” the court heard.

Mugabe’s company has not yet responded to the summons, but was given 10
days within which to respond.

“If you wish to oppose any of the plaintiff’s claims, you must enter an
appearance to defend by making an appropriate entry in the appearance book
kept in the office of the registrar of the High Court of Zimbabwe at
Harare within 10 days after service of this summons (Saturdays, Sundays
and public holidays are not counted as part of this 10-day period, nor is
the day on which this summons was served).

“If you do not enter appearance to defend, the plaintiff’s claim will be
heard and dealt with by the High Court without any further notice to you,”
the summons further read.

Of late, Mugabe’s family businesses have been in soup over debts.

Only last month, Mugabe’s family business, Alpha Omega Dairy (Private)
Limited, was taken to court by a local property consultancy firm, Levgal
Investments (Private) Limited over a $29 000 rental debt at its rented
premises in Harare’s Southerton industrial area.

Levgal Investments, through its representative, Dawn Property Consultancy,
cited Mugabe’s firm Alpha Omega Dairy, two senior employees Stanley Nhari
and Joseph Zirebwa as respondents.

In May 2016, a South African plastics company in KwaZulu-Natal took Alpha
Omega Dairy to the Harare High Court over a debt of more than R600 000 it
says it was owed.

Blakey Investments said the previous year it had produced plastic products
for Mugabe’s dairy farm in the Mazowe District about 20 kilometres west of
Harare and was seeking an order to compel the Mugabe family business to
pay the debt of $38 391.72 (R605 232.03).

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 2
  • comment-avatar
    ace mukadota 6 years ago

    Mugabe does not have to pay for things as he is the King of Zimbabwe !
    This is why ZW has little future if it wishes to become a proper world citizen.
    Business prictice like that carried out by Grace Mugabe and the former big man himself has relegated ZW to primitive basket case – simialar to Mozambique and Malawi etc

    • comment-avatar
      tatenda 6 years ago

      kk. Unfair to quote two innocent countries in local issues. Those two countries have their own currencies.