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Zimbabwe & Mozambique Strengthen Economic Ties:A New Era of Co-operation

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By Enia Dube

In a significant boost to regional economic cooperation, Zimbabwe and Mozambique are set to strengthen their economic ties with the convening of the Mozambique-Zimbabwe Business Forum on November 22, 2025, in Maputo.

The forum, jointly organized by ZimTrade, the Zimbabwe Investment and Development Agency (ZIDA), and Mozambique’s Agência para a Promoção de Investimento e Exportações (APIEX), is expected to deepen cooperation in trade, investment, and tourism, while advancing the Second Republic’s economic diplomacy drive.

The forum, which is also being collaborated on by CEO-Africa Roundtable, Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI), and the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC), provides a platform for the private sector to establish practical partnerships and engage directly with potential business partners in Mozambique.

According to ZimTrade Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Allan Majuru, the Maputo Forum is an opportunity to open new markets for Zimbabwean exporters while providing a structured avenue for investors from both countries to collaborate on manufacturing, logistics, and value-added production.

“Our expectation is that companies will walk away with concrete business leads and agreements that strengthen bilateral trade and investment flows,” said Mr. Majuru. He added that the meeting directly supports the government’s foreign-policy thrust, which emphasizes that foreign engagements must deliver measurable economic outcomes.

The Second Republic has made significant strides in promoting economic diplomacy, and this forum is a testament to that commitment. “This Forum supports that priority by connecting Zimbabwean businesses to regional value chains and promoting collaborative ventures with Mozambican counterparts,” said Mr. Majuru.

He also noted that the private sector’s response shows growing confidence in regional economic cooperation, stating, “We are neighbours with shared economic interests. When we collaborate on trade, logistics, tourism, and industrial development, both economies grow, and this Forum is a step toward building a more coordinated and productive partnership.”

The forum is expected to explore partnerships in various sectors, including agriculture, agro-processing, mining, manufacturing, energy, infrastructure, and tourism. Joint tourism packages linking Zimbabwe’s destinations with Mozambique’s coastline are expected to boost arrivals, while improved value-chain development, logistics, port efficiency, irrigation, and renewable energy projects will strengthen industrialization and export growth for both economies.

The creative industries will also explore partnerships in film production, cultural exhibitions, festivals, and destination promotion. These sectors are increasingly recognized as contributors to economic diversification, employment creation, and regional branding.

Business-to-business meetings will be central to the forum, laying the groundwork for follow-up missions, technical committees, and investment discussions. The meeting comes as Southern Africa strengthens its participation in regional value chains under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). Zimbabwe and Mozambique are seen as strategic partners in this process, given their geographic proximity and complementary economic structures.

Increased collaboration is expected to enhance competitiveness, broaden exports, and support industrial development in both economies. The forum’s format, which includes sector briefings, policy exchanges, and business-to-business sessions, has been arranged to allow companies to identify partners and negotiate opportunities directly.

This engagement comes as both countries intensify efforts to increase industrial capacity, and Mozambican ports remain critical to Zimbabwe’s external trade. Improved coordination on customs, logistics, and transit procedures is expected to reduce export costs and strengthen competitiveness.

The forum aligns with the government’s broader economic diplomacy agenda, which seeks to reposition Zimbabwe as an active participant in regional and international markets. Under the Second Republic, foreign policy has placed emphasis on practical economic cooperation, market expansion, re-engagement, and attracting investment.

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COTTCO Scandal: US$70 Million Vanishes as Farmers Suffer, Governance in Crisis

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Harare, Zimbabwe  – A shocking exposé has rocked the Cotton Company of Zimbabwe Limited (COTTCO), revealing that over US$70 million in crucial funding has allegedly been mismanaged within a single year. This staggering revelation comes as COTTCO continues to fail in its fundamental duty to pay thousands of struggling cotton farmers, sparking outrage and raising serious questions about corporate governance and accountability within state-linked entities.

The bombshell dropped during a Parliamentary Portfolio Committee hearing on Lands, Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Rural Development. John Mangudya, the Chief Executive of the Mutapa Investment Fund, laid bare the grim reality: despite receiving massive financial injections, COTTCO remains a financial black hole, unable to meet its obligations to the very people who sustain the cotton industry.

Mangudya’s testimony painted a damning picture. He disclosed that COTTCO benefits from approximately US$60 million annually in government-backed input support. On top of this, the Mutapa Investment Fund injected an additional US$11 million last year, specifically intended to help clear COTTCO’s mounting debts. Yet, despite this colossal sum – a total exceeding US$70 million – the company still failed to settle an estimated US$25 million in debts.

“This points to serious financial mismanagement,” Mangudya asserted, directly implicating COTTCO’s board and executive for their glaring failures in oversight. He highlighted a disturbing pattern of corporate governance lapses and strong indications of financial irregularities that demand immediate and thorough investigation. In a particularly egregious revelation, Mangudya confirmed that a significant portion of the US$11 million from Mutapa – approximately US$6.6 million – which was explicitly allocated for farmer payments, was instead diverted to service bank debts. This desperate move was reportedly made under duress, as lenders threatened to seize company assets, leaving farmers in the lurch.

In a move that smacks of crisis management, COTTCO’s board resolved on April 28, 2026, to place the company under voluntary corporate rescue. This decision, made under Section 122 of the Insolvency Act (Chapter 6:07), acknowledges the company’s dire financial state, characterized by crippling liquidity constraints, astronomical debt levels, and an ever-growing pile of arrears. While Mangudya attempted to spin this as a “strength” – a necessary intervention to protect COTTCO and facilitate investigation – the reality is that it exposes a profound systemic failure.

“The process that we have taken is a good one because the corporate rescue practitioner will investigate what was happening,” Mangudya stated, attempting to reassure a skeptical public. He insisted that the appointment of corporate rescue practitioners, Farai Chibisa and Ian Mtetwa of Grant Thornton Zimbabwe, would not halt any ongoing investigations or forensic audits. Their mandate is to oversee the restructuring and implement a turnaround strategy, with COTTCO optimistically claiming viability due to its asset base and market presence.

However, this optimism rings hollow for the thousands of cotton farmers who remain unpaid, their livelihoods jeopardized by what appears to be gross negligence and potential corruption. The scale of this alleged financial mismanagement is set to ignite a firestorm of demands for accountability. The corporate rescue process, while perhaps a legal necessity, must not become a shield for those responsible. It must serve as a conduit for a comprehensive, transparent review of COTTCO’s financial affairs, with a clear commitment from Mangudya that any evidence of wrongdoing will be met with decisive action. The Zimbabwean public, and especially its hardworking farmers, deserve nothing less than full transparency and justice for this egregious misuse of public and farmer funds.

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Kutsaga fueling food security and rural growth

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Kutsaga fueling food security and rural growth

Kutsaga Research Station, once synonymous with Zimbabwe’s tobacco industry, is now spearheading a transformative agricultural revolution, pivoting its scientific prowess towards rural industrialisation and national food security.

This monumental shift, lauded by Agriculture Permanent Secretary Prof. Dr. Obert Jiri at the recent ZITF 2026, marks a critical stride in aligning research with commercial viability and the nation’s ambitious Vision 2030 agricultural agenda.

Prof. Dr. Jiri said Kutsaga’s innovative expansion beyond its traditional mandate.

He specifically praised the station’s success in developing tissue-cultured virus-free sweet potatoes and pioneering industrial hemp cultivation.

These initiatives exemplify how institutional expertise can be leveraged to create commercially viable products, underscoring the imperative that research must be commercialised to ensure its long-term sustainability.

“Kutsaga’s transformation is not just about diversifying crops, it is about building resilient value chains that directly benefit our rural communities,” said Prof. Dr. Jiri.

ALSO READ: Global seed giants eye Zimbabwe as strategic hub

This strategic redirection aims to reduce the nation’s reliance on single commodities, thereby shielding farmers from the volatile impacts of market fluctuations and climate change.

The move is a direct response to Zimbabwe’s Vision 2030, which prioritises agricultural transformation as a cornerstone for economic growth and stability.

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Prospect Lithium Marks Historic First with Lithium Sulphate Export

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Prospect Lithium of Zimbabwe has dispatched its first consignment of lithium sulphate from its newly commissioned US$400 million processing plant at Arcadia Mine.

According to the company, this is the first time lithium sulphate has been produced not only in Zimbabwe but across the African continent.

The milestone signals a significant move towards increased local processing of lithium, rather than exporting raw or semi-processed materials.

Prospect described the development as a breakthrough for the country and region, noting that the shipment represents the first production of lithium salts in Zimbabwe and Africa, and highlights progress in mineral beneficiation and industrial growth.

Zimbabwe has been tightening its policies on lithium exports in recent years. In 2022, the government banned the export of raw lithium, pushing mining companies to process the mineral into concentrates.

At that time, major players, including Prospect Lithium (owned by Huayou Cobalt), had already begun upgrading their operations.

In 2025, authorities raised the requirements further, announcing that by 2027, lithium producers will be expected to export sulphate, a higher-value product used in the manufacture of battery materials.

To support this transition, a 10% tax was introduced on lithium concentrates to encourage further processing.

Earlier this year, the government also temporarily halted concentrate exports, later allowing limited shipments under a quota system as producers adjust to the new value-addition requirements.

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