HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's unity government is reviewing rules forcing foreign-owned firms to sell a majority stake to locals, a cabinet minister said on Wednesday, adding that the regulations were published prematurely last month.
The regulations came into effect on Monday and give foreign-owned companies, including banks and mines, 45 days to submit proposals on how they plan to sell 51 percent of their shares to black Zimbabweans within the next five years.
"Those regulations were published prematurely," Welshman Ncube, Industry and Commerce Minister told business executives.
He said the rules had not been submitted to a cabinet committee for debate on their legality and whether they were consistent with government policy. The committee would then make recommendations to the government.
"That did not take place. It is now taking place and all the ministers will be asked to make contributions," Ncube said.
President Robert Mugabe's government in 2007 passed an indigenisation and economic empowerment law, before he formed a power-sharing administration with rival Morgan Tsvangirai last year, seeking to localise control of foreign firms.
Last week Mugabe defended the local ownership laws, contrasting Prime Minister Tsvangirai, who said last month the latest rules were "null and void" because they were done without consultations in cabinet. Industry executives fear the empowerment drive will discourage foreign investment, at a time the new administration is seeking to attract badly needed investment to grow an economy that suffered from a decade of decline.
"We have consensus that there is need for indigenisation (but) we have no consensus yet on how we should achieve that indigenisation in a manner that empower out people while growing the economy. We don't have that consensus in the inclusive government," said Ncube.
* Reuters