Thousands of businesses just got hauled to court, and Zimbabwe’s consumer watchdog basically said playtime is over.
What triggered the courtroom pileup
What triggered the courtroom pileup
- More than 2,000 businesses ended up prosecuted after a massive inspection drive across Zimbabwe.
- Authorities went hunting for unfair trade tricks that have been draining consumers quietly for years.
- The push came from the Consumer Protection Commission.
- Inspections were not random; officers covered all ten provinces as part of a coordinated national effort.
- According to CPC leadership, inspectors carried out 12,627 inspections by the end of 2025.
- Out of those checks, 2,271 businesses crossed legal lines and landed in court.
- The breakdown came from Kudakwashe Mudereri, speaking on behalf of the commission.
- He also confirmed the CPC worked inside a national task force aimed at smuggling and business misconduct.
- Selling expired products that should never have reached shelves.
- Slapping up No refunds or No returns signs as scare tactics.
- Hiding prices or skipping them entirely.
- Moving counterfeit or substandard goods.
- Expired goods have been a recurring problem there.
- Several court cases are already active because of it.
- Refusing refunds is no longer just bad behavior.
- It is a direct offence under the Consumer Protection Act, which gave the CPC sharper teeth.
- The commission says this was not a one-off sweep.
- More enforcement is planned, with tighter action against consumer fraud.
- The CPC wants shoppers to know their rights, not just rely on crackdowns.
- Outreach is set to expand into rural areas and marginalized communities.
- The long-term goal is fewer abuses because consumers are harder to exploit.
- The scale alone rattled businesses.
- Consumers saw proof that complaints are finally turning into consequences.
- For once, the warning signs on shop walls might stop lying.