AFSL paid for Prof Mweene’s cottage construction – Kabwe
AFSL paid for Prof Mweene’s cottage construction – KabweBy Laura Hamusute
Thu 26 Nov. 2009, 04:01 CAT
FORMER Access Financial Services Limited (AFSL) director Faustin Kabwe yesterday told the court that AFSL as a financial institution managing funds on behalf of its clients paid for the construction of Professor Benjamin Mweene’s cottage among other payments.
This is in a case where former ministry of finance permanent secretary Stella Chibanda, former finance chief economist Bede Mphande, former finance director of budget Boniface Nonde, former secretary to the treasury Professor Benjamin Mweene, former finance minister Katele Kalumba, former AFSL directors Kabwe and Aaron Chungu are facing corruption charges.
During examination in chief led by his lawyer John Sangwa, Kabwe looked at a file containing about 200 instructions from AFSL clients valued at about US $6 million.
He explained that he wrote down the instructions as directed by his clients or officers of AFSL who dealt directly with the clients.
Kabwe explained that when he was out of town, the clients would go to AFSL offices and ask officers there to attend to some matters from the funds that AFSL was managing for them at Meer Care and Desai.
He said the officers at AFSL would then contact him wherever he would be so that he could implement the clients’ instructions.
Kabwe testified that he would then write to Meer Care and Desai to effect the transaction.
He told the court that before effecting the transaction, he would establish whether indeed AFSL held funds on behalf of that particular client at Meer Care and Desai or whether the officer who contacted him from AFSL had really been authorised by the client to effect the transaction.
Kabwe testified that it was not AFSL’s business to know why their client wanted to carry out a particular transaction with another party as a financial institution, they had the duty of only complying with the clients’ instructions.
He disclosed that the actual payment instructions were being made by Meer Care and Desai.
Kabwe cited a payment of US $10,000 Meer Care and Desai made to Chibanda’s son Regis Kombe Chibanda in Tampa, Florida on behalf of AFSL.
He testified that AFSL had been engaged by a number of clients to manage their funds.
In cross-examination by prosecutions lawyer Mutembo Nchito, Kabwe said AFSL was regulated by Bank of Zambia (BoZ) as a non-banking financial institution.
He said the company had to keep enough documentation to identify their clients and they were required to keep records in accordance with accounting standards.
Kabwe testified that AFSL was required to keep a clean audit trail.
He told the court that AFSL provided equity support and advice to the Zambia security Intelligence Services (ZSIS).
The matter continues on November 27, 2009.
Labels: AFSL, BENJAMIN MWEENE, CORRUPTION, COURTS, FAUSTIN KABWE
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