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International Removals
Packing
Short and Long-term Storage
Languages spoken:
Warehouse size in square meters: 1350
AGS Frasers Zimbabwe’s clients include international corporate and diplomatic organizations, such as USAID, WFP, UNESCO, the South African, German, Swiss and French Embassies, EU Delegation, CDC, African Development Bank and many others. AGS Frasers Zimbabwe remains a trusted partner to these and other clients around the world.
We support the Global Compact.
For every international move, we plant a tree.
AGS Frasers Zimbabwe was established in 2002 and is fully owned by the AGS Group.
Being part of a larger removals company allows AGS Frasers Zimbabwe to benefit from the AGS Group’s large network of 124 locations in 76 countries, its experience and processes.
For this reason, AGS Frasers in Harare is considered as one of the best removals companies in Zimbabwe.
AGS Frasers Zimbabwe specializes in both domestic and international removals to and from Zimbabwe.
Our staff is able to assist you in English and French. With our own trucks and twenty-five permanent employees available at each step of your move, our removals company in Zimbabwe has all the necessary resources to ensure a smooth and peaceful move to its clients.
AGS Frasers Zimbabwe also benefits from the unique and advanced packing materials of the Group. Because of the size of the AGS Group and the number of removals operations carried out every year, our removals branch in Harare is able to provide its clients with various cartons, which are tailored to the type of goods being transported. This not only increases the safety of the goods, but allows for improved space allocation, further reducing the cost of the removal.
Whether you are moving from Zimbabwe, or have recently arrived back home and require storage for your goods, our 1350 m² warehouse, located in Harare, is at your availability for all your goods including your vehicles, on both a short- and long-term storage basis. Your goods are perfectly safe with 24h security surveillance.
AGS Frasers Zimbabwe wants to ensure its clients of the best quality service. Strict quality procedures, which are defined at a group level, are applied in our removals branch in Harare. These procedures are inspired by industry specific and general quality standards. We thereby can guarantee our clients the best managerial and operational procedures accompanying these practices. We are also an IAM member.
These quality processes combined with the added benefit of a recognized network mean that from Zimbabwe, like from anywhere else in the word, AGS Movers provides top quality removals and storage services.
Zimbabwe is undeniably a nature lover’s paradise, abundantly rich in fauna and flora, and is home to 12 million people of the Shona (82%) and Ndebele (14%) ethnic groups. Zimbabwe boasts an array of national parks and natural treasures, such as Victoria Falls – one of the Seven Natural Wonders and a world heritage site - and Nyanga National Park, home to Africa’s second highest waterfall and Zimbabwe’s highest peak, Mount Nyangani (2,592m). Other national gems include the manmade Mutorashanga Quarry, formerly an asbestos mine and now a delight to first-time divers. Matobo National Park is known for its plethora of animal, bird and plant life, and the Chinhoyi Caves are the most extensive and mysterious caves in Zimbabwe.
Long-standing president, Robert Mugabe, first came into power in 1980, following a landslide victory. After another successful re-election in 1990, students, workers and trade unionists frequently protested to express their discontent with the government. In 1994, industrial instability weakened the economy. In 1996, civil servants and health professionals went on strike over wage disputes. In 2000, President Mugabe redistributed land under a land reform program. This was followed by ongoing droughts and a lack of financial input, resulting in a marked decrease in agricultural exports. Agriculture was traditionally Zimbabwe’s leading export commodity; the mining and tourism sectors now lead. This amounted to sanctions (causing chronic shortages in imported fuel and consumer goods) and a hard-currency shortage in the country causing hyperinflation. Zimbabwe's current economic and food crisis has been attributed to price controls, land confiscations, widespread drought and the HIV/AIDS epidemic. In addition, the Zimbabwe government is still to provide housing to people that were forcibly removed from illegal markets and homes in 2005. After the power-sharing government was formed in February 2009, the Zimbabwe dollar was done away with and price controls were removed. The economy is growing rapidly at present, and according to the IMF in November 2010, Zimbabwe’s economy has seen a second year of growth. This was recorded at 5.9%.