By Mkinga Mkinga,The Citizen Reporter
Posted Wednesday, July 1 2015 at 08:15
Posted Wednesday, July 1 2015 at 08:15
In Summary
- Mr Membe’s move comes at the time when his political rivals have been linking him with the deal, saying he might have benefited from the $20 million paid to a company called Meis Industries Limited
- Mr Bernard Membe was among 42 CCM members who had by yesterday collected nomination forms as the party prepares to pick its candidate for the Union presidency later this month. The party is hoping that its candidate will take over the mantle from Mr Jakaya Kikwete, who will retire after the October 25 General Election after ten years at the helm. Mr Membe is eyeing the highest office in the land after serving as foreign affairs minister for over eight years.
Dar es Salaam. Key
presidential aspirant Bernard Membe has finally broken his silence on
the $20 million (Sh40 billion) Libyan debt. The Minister for Foreign
Affairs and International Cooperation yesterday denied any wrongdoing in
the transaction that involved a debt swap agreement between the two
countries.
Mr Membe’s political rivals have linked him with
the deal, saying he might have benefitted from the money paid to Meis
Industries Limited.
According to Mr Membe, the two governments signed
the agreement in July 2005, setting out how Dar es Salaam would pay its
debt to Tripoli. They signed an Addendum to the agreement on March 4,
2009, that set out how Libya’s debt that was held at the Tanzania
Investment Bank would be spent.
Clause 4.02 of the agreement stated that the $20
million, which was part of the Libyan debt that was at TIB, should be
paid to Meis for the purpose of building a cement factory in Lindi
region.
The Libyan government chose the company and it was
agreed that the $20million be loaned to Meis on condition that the firm
pays up within six years. The money would then be loaned to other local
investors in projects approved jointly by both governments.
According to Mr Membe, the Libyan government
conducted due diligence at its own cost before it released the funds to
its chosen investor and concluded that the cement project was worth
investing in.
After signing the Addendum, according to the
minister, the Libyan government via its embassy in Dar es Salaam, wrote
to the Tanzanian government insisting that payments to Meis be hastened
to avoid delays in constructing the cement factory in Lindi.
“In implementing these two agreements, the debt
swap agreement and addendum to the debt swap agreement, the Tanzanian
government—through its experts from the ministry of finance, TIB,
Attorney General—and Meis Industries met to draft an investment
agreement.”
According to Mr Membe, the Tanzanian government,
TIB and the investor signed the agreement. The Libyan government was
also required to sign the agreement so the project could kick off, but
the Muammar Gaddafi regime declined to seal the deal.
The Libyan government went silent for a year. In
September 2010, Meis wrote to the Attorney-General’s office announcing
its intention to sue the Libyan government for not signing the
agreement.
The investor went ahead and filed a civil suit
number 124/2010 at Tanzania’s High Court seeking a decree that the
$20million get paid to the company as agreed earlier.
According to Mr Membe, the summons was issued to
the Libyan government though its embassy in Dar es Salaam but there was
no response. Neither did the Libyans appoint a lawyer to represent them
at the High Court.
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