4 Arrested as TIMB Dismantles Multi-Million Dollar Auction Fraud Syndicates

 ZimNow Reporter

Four unnamed individuals have been arrested and are set to appear in court soon following a sting operation to crack down on corruption within Zimbabwe’s tobacco sector.

The Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board announced the arrests and also said it had dismantled two syndicates responsible for manipulating prices, soliciting bribes, and exploiting farmers at auction floors. 

The TIMB’s inspectorate unit intercepted the rackets within 48 hours at Tobacco Sales Floors, uncovering collusion between auction staff, middlemen, and merchants to defraud farmers.

“Their strategy was to solicit bribes from unsuspecting farmers, offering them favorable auction outcomes in return,” TIMB stated.

“Part of the money was passed to a checker representing a merchant, while another portion went to an outside trader who purchased manipulated bales at lower costs.” 

TIMB acting CEO Emmanuel Matsvaire condemned the syndicates, vowing to protect the industry’s integrity: “We are determined to uphold transparency, fairness, and integrity through vigilant enforcement. Farmers and stakeholders must report illegal activities.” 

The arrests spotlight systemic issues plaguing Zimbabwe’s tobacco auctions. For years, farmers have reported rampant bribery, bale switching, and price manipulation by syndicates, a development that has ensured that smallholder farmers only get a minuscule portion of the over US$900 million generated in tobacco sales annually.

 

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