Court subpoena Lutepo over exposé in Malawi cashgate case

Lilongwe Senior Resident Magistrate Patrick Chirwa has ordered businessman Oswald Lutepo, the chief suspect in the systematic plunder of government money, dubbed ‘cashgate’, to appear before the court on Friday to explain a letter he wrote to Attorney General Kalekeni Kaphale alleging that he was forced to lie under oath in his earlier statements.

On Friday, Lutepo failed to paper before the court because he was reported “ill” and was given a ten-day bed rest according to his lawyer Osward Mtupila.

Court wants Lutepo to explain allegations that senior government officials were behind the scandal in which businessmen connived with civil servants and politicians to swindle government through payments for goods and services not rendered to government.

Lutepo: Summoned by court
Lutepo: Summoned by court

In the letter to Attorney General, Lutepo – a former governing People’s Party executive member and one of its chief financiers, alleges that he was threatened into implicating some senior government officials in the former Joyce Banda administration while shielding others.

Lutepo said he was warned that should he refuse to play along he would be implicated in the shooting of former Budget Director Paul Mphwiyo.

“I was told in no uncertain terms that the government was after the former Minister of Justice, Ralph Kasambara. I was told that I should cooperate to ensure that Ralph Kasambara was implicated in the cashgate cases,” he writes in the letter addressed to Attorney General and copied to Chief Justice Anastasia Msosa and Western embassies.

The shooting of Mphwiyo on 13 Sept. 2013 unravelled the scandal. Soon after the shooting, Banda said the youthful technocratic was targeted because he was championing her anti-corruption crusade.

Following the shooting, huge stashes of cash – in Malawi kwacha, US dollars and South African rands – started showing up in unimaginable places like car trunks, under pillows or in baby dolls.

An audit by the British audit firm Baker Tilly revealed that in all ,13 billion Malawi kwacha (about US$30 million) was looted in the scandal.

At least 70 suspects, including Lutepo, were arrested and are currently in court answering fraud and corruption charges.

Lutepo, in the highly-circulated letter, alleges that the initial arrangement was that he would be a state witness against senior public Officers “who government believed were responsible for the massive plundering of public resources christened cashgate.”

He continues: “In mid-December, 2013, I was summoned to meet Hon. Fahad Assani (the Justice Minister) at his rural home in (the central district of) Nkhotakota. At this meeting the minister warned me against linking cashgate to the Head of State (former president Joyce Banda), her family and/or the (then governing) Peoples Party. He claimed that my silence was instrumental in the 2014 presidential campaign.”

Assani laughed off Letepo’s allegations, saying: “Lutepo was trying to pre-bargain for a lesser charge; these are just his imaginations.”

Following the scatching expose, Police arrested Lutepo  for “perjury.”

Follow and Subscribe Nyasa TV :

Sharing is caring!

Follow us in Twitter
17 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Read previous post:
Tigers beat KB to reach semis of Standard Bank Cup

A first half goal from Peter Kasonga was enough for Azam Tigers to cruise through into the semi-finals of the...

Close