PG sets up anti-graft taskforce

Kumbirai Hodzi
Mr Kumbirai Hodzi

Daniel Nemukuyu, Harare Bureau
Acting Prosecutor General, Mr Kumbirai Hodzi, has set up a multi-stakeholder anti-graft taskforce to efficiently prosecute high profile corruption cases.

The joint taskforce comprising prosecutors from the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA), Special Anti-Corruption Unit from the President’s Office, Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) and the police, is operating from a boardroom in the PG’s office at Corner House in Harare.

The merger, Mr Hodzi said, has strengthened efforts to combat corruption and a number of dockets have been finalised in a short time and are now ready for trial.

In a statement, Mr Hodzi said the taskforce had since invited a number of suspects for questioning on corruption allegations.

“We’ve merged with the special presidential prosecutorial unit, ZACC and the police to form a strong team that is expected to effectively and efficiently prosecute corruption cases, especially high profile corruption cases,” he said.

“We have, in a short space of time, put in place effective strategies for the prosecution of these matters in a manner which is effective.

“The most important improvement is that high quality dockets with watertight evidence are now going before the courts.”

Mr Hodzi said with the evidence gathered in the graft matters, all those guilty of corruption will be convicted.

“The unified team is determined to get almost a zero percent acquittal rate henceforth,” he said.

Mr Hodzi said there was now unity in the NPA, as the discord that used to be in the office was now a thing of the past.

He said prosecutors were now pulling in the same direction.

“The attitude of all the prosecutors has been remarkably positive after spelling out the vision we have for the country, especially the anti-graft thrust,” said Mr Hodzi. “Prosecution of high profile corruption cases has commenced in earnest.”

The NPA last week managed to prosecute the fraud case of television personality Oscar Pambuka and politician Psychology Maziwisa.

They are accused of swindling the Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) of $12 650.

The duo allegedly charged ZPC $12 650 for facilitating to have the State broadcaster air news items on the power utility’s behalf.

Former Cabinet Minister Samuel Undenge was jailed last week for authorising the ZPC to pay the pair’s Fruitful Communications company for the consultancy job.

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