Telecom Giant Telecel Zimbabwe Facing $240M Debt, Up for Grabs!

The African tech and business landscape is currently marked by significant developments, ranging from the critical sale of a major telecom operator to innovative solutions for local enterprises and stringent measures to close tax loopholes. These events underscore the dynamic environment within various sectors across the continent.
In Zimbabwe, the embattled telecom operator Telecel Zimbabwe has officially been put up for sale, facing immense pressure and deep financial woes. Corporate rescue practitioners from Grant Thornton have invited investors to bid for a stake in the company, which is burdened with over $240 million in debt and is undergoing a court-supervised rehabilitation process that began in October 2025. Interested parties have until April 28, 2026, to submit their offers, with detailed financials available after signing Non-Disclosure Agreements. Telecel, once the country's third-largest operator, has seen its customer base plummet to just over 319,000 subscribers by mid-2025, with its market share falling below 2% behind rivals Econet Wireless and NetOne. Its infrastructure is severely lacking, possessing only a handful of LTE base stations and no 5G rollout plans. The sale is complicated by a long history of ownership disputes dating back to its 1998 inception, including clashes with Zimbabwe's indigenisation laws and a disputed government buyout of a 60% stake from VimpelCom for $40 million in 2015, formally completed in April 2016. The Empowerment Corporation, holding 40%, argued this sale was illegal. Without foreign investment or technical backing post-takeover, the network deteriorated. This sale represents a last-ditch effort to prevent liquidation and will critically shape the future competition within Zimbabwe's telecom market, potentially reducing it to a two-player arena.
Meanwhile, the spirit of African innovation is exemplified by entrepreneurs like Chuma Chukwujama, an Electrical and Electronics Engineering graduate from Obafemi Awolowo University, who carved an unconventional path into technology. His journey began in the late 1990s by assisting Nigerian businesses in digitizing operations, setting up computer systems and networks. Recognizing a critical void where foreign software failed to address local realities, particularly in payroll and HR, Chukwujama pivoted to software development. This led to the launch of AlliedSoft around 2000, through which he built diverse platforms for telecom, banking, and education sectors. His evolutionary journey, adapting from systems integration to software and then to cloud-based solutions, culminated in Xceed365HR. This platform is specifically designed to meet the unique needs of mid-sized and large African businesses, underscoring the importance of context-specific solutions in the continent's rapidly growing tech ecosystem.
In Kenya, the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has officially declared the closure of a significant tax loophole previously exploited by small traders using M-Pesa. On April 24, 2026, KRA acting boss Lilian Nyawanda confirmed that businesses rotating M-Pesa paybills and till numbers to conceal income are now under strict scrutiny. The crackdown is facilitated by the inherent traceability of M-Pesa transactions, where both sender and receiver records allow the KRA to trace money trails even if traders fail to declare income. Central to this enforcement is the Electronic Tax Invoice Management System (eTIMS), launched in 2023. eTIMS has evolved into Kenya's real-time tax engine, integrating sales, invoices, and payments into a single verification loop, enabling instant flagging of discrepancies for businesses filing zero or low returns. This urgent move is driven by Kenya's substantial KSh930 billion revenue gap. The lack of proper digital receipts from informal trade, particularly in hubs like Eastleigh, disrupts the entire tax chain. The KRA's approach has shifted from education to enforcement, reinforced by a leadership change in April 2026 and a clear May 1 deadline for issuing electronic receipts. Ironically, the very mobile money system that fostered financial inclusion for millions of Kenyans is now providing the data that makes them visible to the tax authorities, with eTIMS connecting the digital dots to close the tax avoidance gap rapidly.
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