Anjin still to pay workers December salaries

By Staff Reporter

One of the largest diamond mining companies in Zimbabwe, Anjin Diamonds, has still not paid its employees their December salaries according to workers who spoke to Nehanda Radio. 

At the occasion of the granting of the mining license, Anjin executives meet President Robert Mugabe and then Minister of Defence Emmerson Mnangagwa

“The company also did not pay us the bonus which they promised, however they gave each worker cooking oil, 4kgs sugar & 20kgs mealie meal which all cost $24 as annual bonus,” one worker told us.

He complained that they were being abused “day and night” by the Chinese nationals running the company adding “how can we be treated like slaves in our country?”

The company, which is ‘officially’ a joint venture between the state-owned Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation (ZMDC) and Anjin of China, has five ventures in the Marange district.

Last month the company said it would fire almost a quarter of its 845-strong workforce because of falling prices as it switches to underground operations.

“The slump in mineral price is the main reason,” for cutting 190 jobs, Director Munyaradzi Machacha said at the time.

“The other issue is we are moving away from alluvial mining,” to more expensive underground operations.

Anjin is the biggest mining operation in the Marange area. Unlike the other firms Mbada Diamonds and Marange Resources who have partnerships with the Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation (ZMDC), the official position has always been that Anjin is working with the army.

Pressure group Global Witness say that half of Anjin’s shares are held by Brigadier-General Charles Tarumbwa, a Zimbabwean military lawyer also listed as the company secretary and principal officer.

Other directors listed at the registry are Chinese nationals Jiang Zhaoyao, Chen Qing, Peng Zheng, Li Zhongqi and Huang Xianjue.

“An affidavit records a resolution making Anjin a joint venture between Matt Bronze (Pvt) Ltd, the principal officer of which is Tarumbwa, and Anhui Foreign Economic Construction (Group). The agreement was signed by Peng Zheng on behalf of AFEC(G) and Tarumbwa for Matt Bronze,” the report states.

In June 2012 then Deputy Mines Minister Gift Chimanikire told Parliament that Anjin was controlled by the Chinese who had 50% equity and the Zimbabwe Defence Industries (ZDI) with 40%. The remaining 10% was supposed to be owned by the government through the ZMDC.

Then Finance Minister Tendai Biti denied the ZMDC was involved.

The Global Witness report also exposes more inconsistencies in the ownership structure because, “the company register also states that Anjin’s share capital is made up of US$2,000, consisting of 2,000 ordinary shares, which are shared equally between Brigadier General Tarumbwa and Zheng.”

Described by the United Nations as a Judge Advocate General at the Ministry of Defence, Brigadier General Tarumbwa was listed on the EU targeted sanctions list because he was “directly involved in the terror campaign waged before and during the elections” in Manicaland.

Anjin’s executive board on the Zimbabwean side is a ‘who is who’ of police, military and state security chiefs, some notorious for their involvement in gross human rights abuses, including murder.

The board includes: “Martin Rushwaya (Ministry of Defence permanent secretary), Oliver Chibage (police commissioner), Ms Nonkosi M. Ncube (commissioner in the police) and Munyaradzi Machacha  (ZANU PF director of publications).

Also on the board are Mabasa Temba Hawadi (Director Marange Resources), Morris Masunungure (retired army officer) and Romeo Daniel Mutsvunguma (a retired army colonel who took part in the brutal political violence in the run up to the June 2008 one man presidential run-off election).

Anjin DiamondsCharles TarumbwaJiang ZhaoyaoMabasa Temba HawadiMatt BronzeMorris MasunungureMunyaradzi MachachaRomeo Daniel MutsvungumaZimbabwe Mining Development CorporationZMDC
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