Claims on Chasi dismissal rubbished
THE Government has dismissed as patently false claims by exiled former Cabinet Minister, Professor Jonathan Moyo, that the National Oil and Infrastructure Company (NOIC) received a US$1.2 billion loan from a foreign company, Sotic International.
Ministry of Finance and Economic Development Permanent
Secretary Mr George Guvamatanga yesterday said no such deal was ever signed.
Prof Moyo alleged that NOIC was forced to mortgage the
national oil pipeline to secure the said loan.
He claimed Cde Fortune Chasi was removed from his position
as Minister of Energy and Power Development because he had attempted to probe
the alleged loan deal.
However, no such loan agreement was ever signed.
“The information is false. The value of the pipeline is
US$300 million. Sotic could only lend money that it would have raised from its
bankers, unless it had free cash flows.
“Which bank would lend you US$1.2 billion against security
of an asset worth US$300 million? One of the critical tenets of lending is the
purpose of the loan and the source of repayment. An international lender would
not conduct adequate due diligence and lend a country $1,2 billion which will
then be fraudulently diverted,” said Mr Guvamatanga.
Loans to Government are guided by the Public Debt Management
Act, and any Government borrowing goes through a Debt Management Committee
chaired by the Secretary for Finance with the Reserve Bank Governor and the
Attorney-General being the other members of the committee.
“No loan would be captured in Government books if not
approved by this committee. The approval then allows the loan to be captured
into Government books for the purpose of repayment.
“It is not possible to record the loan if the loan proceeds
have not been received and just like in the banks, there is also a process of
front office, middle office and back office in the Public Debt Management
Office,” said Mr Guvamatanga.
The system is fool-proof and one could not just end up with
a loan where the proceeds were never received and captured in the system.
Contacted for comment yesterday, Energy and Power
Development secretary Engineer Gloria Magombo said only the appointing
authority knew the real reasons why Cde Chasi was sacked.
“I am sorry I cannot respond on the claims. The appointing
authority is the one that can give the reasons,” she said.
Cde Chasi could not be reached for comment yesterday as he
did not pick up his phone.
However, he dismissed the claims on Twitter and clarified
that he had never commissioned an investigation into any Sotic deal and that no
investigation was ever done on NOIC.
“I have seen a set of tweets (by) Jonathan Moyo suggesting
that I caused an investigation into what he calls the Sotic deal. I have no
knowledge of this deal nor did I cause the alleged investigation.
“In my entire tenure at the ministry, I never caused any investigation or inquiry into anything at NOIC. I had no issues at that level.
“I must make it very very clear that I don’t harbour any bitterness regarding my current position. I accept the decision to relieve me of my position as that is the President’s prerogative,” Mr Chasi tweeted.
Prof Moyo’s latest claim is just one of several
contradictory conspiracies that he has fed his followers over the last few
days.
On Friday, posting a screenshot of a WhatsApp message, Moyo
claimed that Mr Chasi had been fired after he “reportedly struck a deal with
Glencore Industries, owners of Total”.
However, Glencore, a UK commodities company based in
Switzerland, in fact does not own Total, a French oil firm. There is no
relationship between the two firms.
Challenged on that lie, Prof Moyo admitted that his claims
“don’t quite add up”. It was then that Moyo changed his story to Sotic.
His frantic tweets came after it emerged that Moyo and other
former G40 allies had written to the ANC, begging South Africa’s ruling party
to help G40 remnants to be readmitted into ZANU PF. Only the revolutionary
movement had the capacity to resolve any problems in Zimbabwe, the July 5
letter to the ANC said.
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