The law firm of choice for internationally focused companies

+263 242 744 677

admin@tsazim.com

4 Gunhill Avenue,

Harare, Zimbabwe

Desperate traders risk virus spread to smuggle bales into Zimbabwe – The Zimbabwean

Second-clothes are a major source of income for informal traders in Zimbabwe. PHOTO | FILE

In Summary

  • Cross-border traders, who make their living from buying and selling goods sourced from neighbouring countries, are defying lockdown regulations.
  • Zimbabweans suffering from hyperinflation trek to neighbouring countries such as Botswana, Zambia, Mozambique and South Africa to buy basic goods and most of them use illegal crossing points to avoid paying taxes.
  • The southern African country’s inflation rate soared to 676.4 per cent in March from 540.2 per cent the previous month amid a weak exchange rate and food shortages.
  • Two weeks ago the government introduced price controls, saying retailers were profiting from the coronavirus pandemic.

Zimbabwe is clamping down on second-hand clothes imports as cross-border Covid-19 coronavirus infections and smuggling surge.

Cross-border traders, who make their living from buying and selling goods sourced from neighbouring countries, are defying lockdown regulations to illegally cross into countries such as South Africa and Mozambique, according to authorities.

Monica Mutsvangwa, the Minister of Information, said smuggling activities especially along the vast Mozambique border pose a serious threat as imported coronavirus cases are on the increase.

“An increase in the smuggling of second-hand clothes into the country through border posts with Mozambique such as Mt Selinda and Sango poses unprecedented danger of spreading Covid-19 by to those who wear them,” Mrs Mutsvangwa said following a Cabinet meeting on the issue last week.

“The government will upscale the enforcement of the law banning the importation of second hand-clothes,” she added.

Zimbabwe first banned the importation of second-clothes in 2015 to protect the country’s textile industry, but relaxed the restrictions two years later as it is a major source of income for informal traders hit hard by the collapse of the economy. Traders source bales of the clothes from Tanzania, Mozambique, South Africa and Zambia to resell to locals whose shrinking sources of income make it difficult for them to buy brand new clothes.

Post published in: Business