Haverfordwest Covid loan cheat who ran Carmarthen phone shop ordered to repay nearly £200k

Zahid Afzal, 37, of Albert Street, Haverfordwest, abused the emergency support scheme by repeatedly lying on loan applications for his companies, which operated phone shops and kiosks in Carmarthen, Shropshire, Hampshire and North Devon.

Afzal had already secured £52,500 legitimately. But investigators say he then “deliberately abused” the system, applying for three more maximum £50,000 loans he knew he wasn’t entitled to — including one for Phone Bits Limited, which ran the Carmarthen store.

He falsely claimed his businesses hadn’t received previous loans, inflated turnover figures and transferred large sums into his personal accounts instead of using the money for the shops. In court last year, he admitted using some of the cash for personal expenditure.

Afzal appeared at Swansea Crown Court, where a judge ruled he must repay £197,306 within three months. If he fails, he’ll be jailed for two years — and will still owe the money.

The confiscation order follows the sentence he received in 2025, when he was handed a two‑year suspended prison term, 300 hours of unpaid work, a 12‑month curfew and 20 rehabilitation activity days. He was also banned from being a company director for seven years.

Investigators found Afzal lied repeatedly on applications in 2020. In one case, he claimed Phone Bits Limited had never received a Bounce Back Loan — even though £32,500 had been paid into the business account the day before. He also boosted the turnover of Phones Onn Ltd from £80,000 to £200,000 to unlock the maximum loan amount.

A “significant amount” of the £150,000 was later transferred into Afzal’s personal accounts, breaking the rules of the scheme.

Alexander Grierson, Head of Asset Recovery at the Insolvency Service, said Afzal had made their job easier by admitting in court that he still had the money.

“Afzal deliberately abused the Bounce Back Loan Scheme by applying for loans he knew he was not entitled to,” he said. “We are determined criminals such as Afzal are not allowed to benefit financially from their greed during the pandemic.”

A restraint order was placed on Afzal’s accounts under the Proceeds of Crime Act to stop him moving or spending assets while the investigation continued.

The final confiscation figure includes the full £150,000 he fraudulently obtained, plus indexation to reflect the change in the value of money since 2020.

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‘Pay now or face the consequences’ – last chance to return wrongly‑claimed Covid cash

A new Covid Voluntary Repayment Scheme, launched by the UK Government on Friday 12 September, gives a “no questions asked” window until December 2025 for anyone to return pandemic‑era funds they were not entitled to, or no longer needed.

The scheme covers all Covid support programmes – including furlough, bounce‑back loans, business support grants and Eat Out to Help Out – and applies to individuals as well as companies.

Undercover checks and tougher powers ahead

Covid Counter‑Fraud Commissioner Tom Hayhoe said the offer is a final chance to “wipe the slate clean” before new investigatory powers come into force next year.

“Pay now, clear your conscience, or face the consequences,” he warned. “This money belongs in communities, the NHS, police and armed forces. Those who don’t take up this straightforward offer and have knowingly, wrongly claimed taxpayer‑funded help could face prosecution, disqualification, or prison. The digital trail is forever – the time to settle is now.”

From 2026, the government will have expanded powers to investigate and prosecute Covid fraud, shut down businesses, and ban directors. Thousands could face court action, with the most serious offenders jailed.

Public urged to report suspected fraud

Alongside the repayment scheme, a new Covid fraud reporting website has been launched so members of the public can flag suspected wrongdoing.

The Treasury says more than £10 billion was lost to fraud, flawed contracts and waste during the pandemic. Around £1.54 billion has already been recovered, but ministers want to claw back far more before the deadline.

‘Extraordinary circumstances’

Mr Hayhoe said many small businesses made honest mistakes in the chaos of the pandemic, but some knowingly took money they shouldn’t have.

“I’ve spoken to hundreds of small business owners who’ve told me they wanted help but the rules kept changing and advice was confusing. Some took bad decisions at the time that are eating away at them – it’s keeping them awake at night. This scheme gives them the chance to put it right, without lengthy investigations or public shame.”

How to repay or report

The scheme runs until 31 December 2025. After that, the “no questions asked” offer will be withdrawn and tougher sanctions will apply.

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