Thursday, December 31, 2015
Tourists attracted by Maputo beaches
Maputo, Inhambane and Pemba might not be as crowded as in previous years, but the data collected by "The O País Económico" puts overall occupancy levels at around 60 percent, with some resorts boasting 90 percent occupancy and others less than 50 percent.If at this point in time occupancy levels don’t look too impressive, tour operators say that after the family day celebrations are marked tomorrow, we can look forward to full houses, given the domestic and foreign tourists’ habit of taking their New Year celebrations to the beach or other tourist spot.
According to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism (MCT), tourist resorts located on End-of-gold and Macaneta beaches in Maputo province are showing more than 90 percent occupancy levels, a sign of the appetite that both domestic and international holidaymakers have for this part of the country.Maputo tourist resorts with a sea view come off best, with rates between 85 and 90 percent. Most still have a few luxury suites still available, while the standard rooms are all full.
Monday, December 28, 2015
MOZAMBICAN MONEY-LAUNDERERS ARRESTED AT BORDER
The South African authorities arrested two Mozambicans on
Friday who were carrying millions of dollars in banknotes hidden in the back of
a pick-up truck. According to the South African police, the total seized was
4.9 million US dollars, 2.2 million euros and 20,000 South African rands. At
current exchange rates, this is equivalent to more than 7.3 million dollars.The
money was hidden in a compartment carefully built in the back of the truck. It
would have escaped detection had it not been for an anonymous tip-off to the
South African police. Once the police had found the money it took them five
hours to count it.A spokesperson for the South African Revenue Service (SARS),
Sandile Memela, said the seizure took place at about 05.40. “The authorities
searched the vehicle and found false compartments”, Memela said. “When the
driver was questioned, he said they were empty”. But the police opened the
compartment and found plastic bags full of money. The police, who did not
reveal the identities of the two men, said this was the largest such seizure in
South African history. They promised to work with the Mozambican police to
determine whether the two suspects are part of a larger crime syndicate. The
men, who said they were driving from Maputo to Johannesburg, are being charged
with money-laundering, and they will appear in court in Komatipoort next week.
One
of the supposed money-launderers told a reporter from Mozambican Television
(TVM) that the money came from the sale of cell phones in Mozambique. But most
of the cell phones sold in Mozambique are at the cheaper end of the market, and
to generate 7.3 million dollars these men would have needed to sell hundreds of
thousands of phones.Furthermore, they would have been paid in Mozambican
currency, meticais. They did not explain how they had changed the meticais into
dollars, euros and rands, nor why, if the business was legitimate, they had
hidden the money in a special compartment in their vehicle. Contacted by MIA, the spokesperson for the General
Command of the Mozambican police, Inacio Dina, confirmed that the South
Africans have indeed informed the Mozambican authorities of the seizure. He
added that, on Saturday, a Mozambican police team was sent to South Africa.“This team will join the South African team to begin the
investigations”, said Dina. “The team consists of investigators and experts in
the area”. Asked about the identity of the two suspects, Dina said “They are
Mozambican citizens, and from their appearance, they are of Asian descent”.
He
said the police do not yet know where the money came from or where the suspects
intended to take it. These were matters that the South African and Mozambican
investigators would have to follow up. This is not the first time large amounts
of foreign currency have been smuggled out of Mozambique. In December 2010,
Mozambican businessman Momed Khalid Ayoob was detained in Swaziland in
possession of 18 million rands in banknotes (equivalent to 2.6 million US
dollars at the exchange rate of the time). He admitted that he was taking the
money to Dubai. The Swazi authorities confiscated the money, and started
criminal proceedings against Ayoob. That case never reached its conclusion
because, in April 2012, Ayoob was gunned down by an unidentified assailant outside
a mosque in central Maputo.
OLICE DENY THAT MOATIZE MAYOR KILLED TRUCK DRIVER
The Mozambican police
have denied reports that the mayor of Moatize, in the western province of Tete,
Carlos Portimao, shot and killed a truck driver last Thursday.According to a
report in Monday’s issue of the independent newssheet “Mediafax”, the 30 tonne
Freightliner truck caused an accident in Moatize. Instead of stopping, the
truck driver attempted to leave the scene, but in doing so damaged other cars,
including scraping the side of the Toyota Surf belonging to Portimao.The police
gave chase to the truck, and Portimao joined the chase. A report circulated
that Portimao caught up with the truck and shot the driver five times. He died
in hospital a few hours later.However, the spokesperson for the Tete provincial
police command, Deolinda Matavele, said that after a few minutes Portimao
abandoned the chase, and left it up to the police to catch the fugitive truck
driver.The chase went on for about 20 kilometres, and then the driver, and a
woman accompanying him, jumped out of the moving truck and made an attempt to
escape through the bush. The pursuing police opened fire, hitting the driver in
the thigh and the woman in the foot.When “Mediafax” asked Matavele why the
driver had died from a thigh wound, she replied that only the hospital
authorities could answer that question. As for Portimao’s alleged ownership of
a pistol, Matavele said that the mayor does not use a firearm and is not
authorized to carry one. “So I can assure you that Carlos Portimao was not
among the group of police who gave chase to the truck”, she added.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)