They finally stopped chasing headlines and started chasing the money, and over US$200 million already got dragged back into the light.
What just dropped in Harare
What just dropped in Harare
- The National Prosecuting Authority of Zimbabwe rolled out its 2026 to 2030 Strategic Plan.
- The reveal came with a flex, more than US$200 million seized in the past five years.
- This was not hype; it was a scorecard.
- The recoveries happened between 2021 and 2025.
- Assets were taken through preservation and forfeiture orders.
- Everything ran under the Money Laundering and Proceeds of Crime Act.
- Prosecutor-General Loyce Matanda-Moyo made it clear that the mindset changed.
- Asset recovery is no longer a bonus prize after convictions.
- It is being treated as a frontline weapon against corruption.
- The State tracks and freezes property tied to criminal activity.
- Cash, vehicles, houses, companies, and valuables all qualify.
- Assets can be taken even when hidden through complex financial setups.
- Third parties holding tainted property are not shielded.
- Civil forfeiture is fully on the table.
- Assets can be confiscated without a criminal conviction.
- The State only needs to show, on the balance of probabilities, that the crime funded the property.
- Financial investigations are getting sharper and more aggressive.
- Cross-border cooperation is being scaled up to chase offshore money.
- Tracking illicit flows is no longer staying within borders.
- NPAZ is pushing hard for the Whistleblower Protection Bill to be finalized.
- Justice Matanda-Moyo called it a missing link.
- The goal is to protect people who expose corruption from retaliation.
- Confidentiality, immunity, and safety are part of the promise.
- Zimbabwe loses an estimated US$1.5 billion to US$2 billion every year.
- Those figures come from the African Development Bank and Global Financial Integrity.
- That money could have gone to hospitals, schools, and economic growth.
- Money is slipping across borders illegally.
- Trade misinvoicing, tax dodging, smuggling, and bribery.
- Profits are parked in offshore tax havens instead of taxed locally.
- Justice Matanda-Moyo said tax evaders and money launderers should brace themselves.
- Corporate accountability is being put on notice.
- The tone shifted from polite to firm.
- NPAZ plans to push harder on corruption files.
- Special focus is on referrals from the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission.
- The Police Anti-Corruption Unit is also central to this push.
- The Asset Forfeiture Unit sits inside NPAZ.
- It exists under Section 27A of the National Prosecuting Authority Act.
- Its job is tracing, freezing, and confiscating the proceeds of serious crimes.
- Terrorist financing and financial system abuse are part of its mandate.
- The State wants crime to stop paying, literally.
- Prosecutors are aiming at wallets, not just court dockets.
- If the strategy holds, corruption just got a lot more expensive.