Monday, 2 February 2026

Chombo a silent Zim billionaire. No wonder these thugs have killed so they can continue to loot!

 Chombo a silent Zim billionaire


On the matrimonial assets, Mrs Chombo says she signed a post-nuptial agreement stating that they will share 50 percent of all properties acquired — whether held personally or in proxy — during the subsistence of their marriage.


She averred that on top of fixed assets including a borehole, generator, coldroom, it will be just for Minister Chombo to pay a monthly maintenance of US$2 000 until her death or re-marriage.


She also wants the court to award her 15 of the family vehicles that include:


NB The following items are less than 50% they are actually what Mrs Chombo wants.


4 Toyota Land Cruisers

3 Mercedes Benzes

Mahindra

2 Nissan Wolfs,

1 Toyota Vigo,

1 Mazda BT-50,

1 Bus

1 Nissan Hardbody

1 Toyota Hilux

Mrs Chombo is also claiming other properties that include:


2 Glen View houses

2 flats in Queensdale,

A property in Katanga Township,

Stand Number 1037 Mount Pleasant Heights

4 Norton business stands

3 Chinhoyi business stands,

4 Banket business stands,

1 commercial stand in Epworth,

2 residential stands in Chirundu

4 commercial stands in Kariba

1 stand in Ruwa

1 stand in Chinhoyi,

2 stands in Mutare

2 stands in Binga.

4 stands in Victoria Falls

1 stand in Zvimba Rural

Chitungwiza (two residential and two commercial stands)

Beitbridge (four stands),

20 stands in Crow Hill, Borrowdale

10 stands in Glen Lorne,

2 flats at Eastview Gardens (B319 and B320)

1 flat at San Sebastian Flats in the Avenues, Harare

Number 79 West Road, Avondale.

Greendale house

Number 36 Cleveland Road, Milton Park

Number 135 Port Road, Norton,

2 Bulawayo houses.

Number 18 Cuba Rd, Mount Pleasant

Number 45 Basset Crescent, Alexandra Park,

2 Chegutu houses

1Glen Lorne house (Harare)

2 houses (Victoria Falls).

Stand along Simon Mazorodze Road,

Norton (one stand)

Avondale (two stands)

365 Beverly House (one stand)

Bulawayo (three stands),

Mica Point Kariba (one stand).

She further wants the court to share farming equipment at New Allan Grange Farm including three tractors, two new combine harvesters, two boom sprayers and two engines.


She is also seeking an order compelling Minister Chombo to cede to her shares in the family's 10 companies including Dickest, Hamdinger, Landberry and Track in Security Company.


Mrs Chombo, in her court papers, is also claiming cattle at Darton Farm, shared chicken runs, pigsties, a shop, grinding mill, house, mills, tractors, lorries, six trucks, five of which are non-runners, four trailers (three non-runners) and one truck.


She added that other interests were the Mvurwi Mine, hunting safari lodges in Chiredzi, Hwange, Magunje and Chirundu as well as properties in South Africa.


No wonder these Zanu PF have killed just to remain in power so they can continue to loot!

In any serious democratic tradition, political leadership is strengthened—not weakened—by scrutiny. We are failed state for lack of it! W Mukori

 @ Hopewell Chin’ono


“ Zimbabwe yakazara madofo!”


Man is supposed to be a creature of reason but when one keeps repeating the foolishness of participating in flawed elections to perpetuate the Zanu PF dictatorship and their own suffering for 46 years and counting then you know you really are dealing with a creature of a lesser God!


@ Dr Sibangilizwe Moyo


In any serious democratic tradition, political leadership is strengthened—not weakened—by scrutiny. Yet, in contemporary Zimbabwean opposition politics, criticism has increasingly been recast as betrayal, enquiry as hostility, and analysis as malice.


Nowhere is this more evident than in the reaction to those who seek to interrogate Nelson Chamisa’s attempted return to the political arena.


Those who have genuinely sought to understand the rationale, timing, and strategic coherence of Chamisa’s re-entry into Zimbabwean politics have often been met not with reasoned counter-argument but with abuse and ridicule from self-proclaimed supporters.


This defensive posture is both surprising and deeply troubling. It reflects not confident…


If the truth be said Zimbabwe has never had this “serious democratic tradition”. We have always preferred the easy life, go along to get along and, better still if you cannot beat them joint them. This has now been hard wired into our political culture it is hard to uproot!