Tag Archives: Luthando Holding Limited

Malawi Court acquits Paramount Holdings directors: Bars state from future charges

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-The Chief Resident Magistrate’s Court in Lilongwe has acquitted the directors of Paramount Holdings Limited and the company itself on all criminal charges, bringing a definitive end to a high-profile legal battle that began in 2021.

In a landmark ruling delivered on Friday, June 27, 2025, the court cleared Paramount Holdings directors—Prakash Virji Ghedia, Arvindkumar Atit Patel, and Suresh Khimji Jagatiya—alongside the company, of three criminal charges, including conspiracy to commit a felony and the alleged use of false documents to obtain a government tender.

Significantly, the court issued an order prohibiting the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) from pursuing any further charges related to the matter against the individuals or the company.

“The accused persons are hereby acquitted from criminal charges,” reads the court’s ruling in Criminal Case No. 868 of 2023. “The court hereby bars the state from bringing any charges against the accused persons on the same grounds.”

The charges, initially filed in July 2021, were based on a complaint by Hendrix Laher, director of Luthando Holdings Limited—a business competitor. Laher alleged that Paramount Holdings had submitted a forged Yamaha dealership certificate to win a motorcycle supply tender issued by JHPIEGO, an international health NGO.

Court documents reveal that both Paramount and Luthando Holdings had submitted bids to supply Yamaha motorcycles to several entities, including the Ministry of Education, Ministry of Health, Ministry of Local Government, Kamuzu University of Health Sciences, and JHPIEGO.

The tender was awarded to Paramount Holdings on July 7, 2020. Laher subsequently lodged a complaint with the Fiscal and Fraud Section of the Malawi Police Service.

However, the case unraveled when the complainant failed to appear in court on at least three occasions.

This lack of cooperation, coupled with an absence of credible evidence, led the Office of the DPP—first under Dr. Steven Kayuni, then under Masauko Edwin Chamkakala—to discontinue the matter.

A formal certificate of discontinuance was issued on March 19, 2024, under Section 77 of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code.

After the statutory six-month period passed, the court officially acquitted the accused and barred the state from reopening the case.

The ruling provides Paramount Holdings and its directors with full legal vindication, enabling them to continue participating in public and donor-funded tenders without restriction or blemish on their record.

In 2022, Yamaha Motor Corporation Japan formally appointed Paramount Holdings as the sole authorized distributor of Yamaha motorcycles and related products in Malawi.

Meanwhile, scrutiny is now turning to Luthando Holdings and its director, Hendrix Laher.

Impeccable sources allege that Laher used the legal system in bad faith to eliminate competition, relying on unofficial channels and political pressure.

“He has consistently used unofficial channels and political connections to harass business rivals, but the truth always comes out,” said a source familiar with the case.

Further concerns have emerged about Luthando Holdings’ unauthorized use of the Yamaha trademark.

The company has reportedly advertised Yamaha-branded products across Malawi—despite lacking any formal authorization from Yamaha Japan. Legal experts have criticized these actions as misleading and potentially fraudulent.

In a related civil case, Luthando Holdings and other companies are challenging Yamaha Japan’s exclusive dealership agreement with Paramount Holdings.

These firms are alleged to have bid for government tenders using documentation from Yamaha agents based in South Africa—raising questions about the legitimacy of such practices under Malawi’s procurement laws.

With its name cleared, Paramount Holdings is now positioned to grow its operations in Malawi with renewed confidence and full legal clarity.

State pleads thirdly for adjournment on Paramount Holdings directors’ summon case

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-The state through the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) has asked the court to adjourn the summon proceeding of Paramount Holdings Limited (PHL) Directors in undisclosed criminal charges which was slated for Wednesday, January 17, 2024, at Lilongwe Chief Resident Magistrate court.

In a court notice seen of case number 868 of 2023, addressing the Chief Resident Magistrate court by DPP Masauko Chamkakala said the state needs to review and understand the contents of the summon before proceeding with criminal charges against PHL’s directors.

The court summons cases against the state and Prakash Virji Ghedia, Arvindkumar Atit Patel, Suresh Khimji Jagatiya, and Paramount Holdings Limited are yet to commerce.

This is the third time the state has failed to disclose summoning charges against PHL’s directors while resorting to court adjournments.

The summon was adjourned from August 11 to September 6, 2023, from September 6 to January 17, 2024, and from January 17 to an undisclosed date.

In an interview with PHL’s lawyer Gift Katundu outside the court on Wednesday, he said that the summon proceedings failed due to two factors, including the Chief Resident Magistrate’s absence and DPP’s plea for adjournment.

Katundu told journalists outside the court that “The defence team will keep on dancing to the state’s tunes within the time frame given.

“Thereafter, my client will take another step if the state fails to bring the case to the light.”

Background

Paramount Holdings (PHL) Limited has been facing persecution from greedy and jealous competitors who have now resorted to creating and circulating fake news about the company.

Competitors’ greed and jealousy are the main driving force behind civil case 868 of 2023 in which PHL directors are accused of making a false document showing that the company is an authorised dealer of Yamaha Motorcycles in Malawi, our investigations have revealed.

PHL is one of the leading and most reliable suppliers of agriculture implements and construction machinery and appointed dealer for Yamaha motorcycles and other Yamaha products in Malawi.

But since Yamaha Japan appointed the company as an authorized dealer of its products in Malawi, their competitors have been creating and circulating fake news aimed at nothing, but to tarnish the image of PHL and its directors.

This is even though PHL has been contributing significantly to the welfare of Malawians through donations to public health facilities and timely delivery of farm inputs in the Affordable Input Programme (AIP).

PHL was probably the first entity to heed a call from President Lazarus Chakwera to the corporate world to help renovate Area 25 Health Centre in Lilongwe after it got vandalized by the angry Mgona residents in early 2023.

It is the only company that donated state-of-the-art equipment to the facility.

A few months later, PHL sourced a modern ambulance, medical equipment, and furniture from a Japanese company, Itochu Corporation, and Takemoto Oil and Fat Co. Limited.

The ambulance and all the other supplies were donated to Therere Health Centre in the area of Senior Chief Ngabu in Chikwawa.

At the height of scarcity of NPK and UREA fertilizers in 2022, the company successfully assisted the government in securing a huge tonnage of the inputs, which were distributed to thousands of farmers where it was contracted to supply.

But despite all this goodwill, its competitors have not relented in persecuting it using propaganda and fake news designed to tarnish its image.

One of the PHL competitors Luthando Holding Limited alleged that the company is making false claims about its dealership for Yamaha Motor Company Ltd of Japan to the extent that they sought a court injunction stopping Yamaha Motors Limited from dealing with Paramount Holdings.

This comes despite Yamaha Motors issuing a certificate to PHL as the sole distributor, seller, and importer of Yamaha products to Malawi.

Without shame, Luthando Holdings Limited last week used Stansfield Motors’ limited name with a bogus address to obtain an injunction stopping Yamaha Motor Corporation from awarding the sole dealership of Yamaha to Paramount Holdings.

This was revealed when different lawyers with default judgments against disbanded Stansfield Motors frocked the High Court to learn about the physical address of Stansfield Motors as presented to the High Court.

It has been learnt that Luthando Holdings filed for the injunction using a bogus address for Stansfield Motors Limited that ceased to exist in 2019.

Stansfield Motors was declared bankrupt for failing to pay bank loans of MK5 billion, consequently being closed and disbanded.

Currently, former Stansfield Motors workers are in court claiming their dues.

Luthando Holdings and its partners are bitter with the recent pronouncement of Japanese leading automobile manufacturer Yamaha Motors company by certifying PHL as the sole importer and seller of Yamaha products for Malawi.