Category Archives: Politics

Malawi has a multi-party system with over 40 registered political parties.The political process in Malawi is such that parties are voted into power. Parties participate in an electoral process. The parties with the most representation in the National Assembly are the People’s Party (PP), Malawi Congress Party (MCP), United Democratic Front (UDF), and Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).

President of Malawi 

Under the country’s 1966, 1994 and 1995 constitutions, the President is executive head of state. The first President was elected by the National Assembly, but later presidents were elected in direct popular elections for a five-year term. In the event of a vacancy, the Vice-President becomes President.

  Denotes Vice-President acting as President
? President
(Birth–Death)
Portrait Tenure Elected Political affiliation
(at time of appointment)
Took office Left office Time in Office
1 Hastings Banda
(1899–1997) [1]
Dr HK Banda, first president of Malawi.jpg 6 July 1966 24 May 1994 27 years,319 days Malawi Congress Party
2 Bakili Muluzi
(1942–)
Muluzi.png 24 May 1994 24 May 2004 10 years,3 days 1994
1999
United Democratic Front
3 Bingu wa Mutharika
(1934–2012)
Mutharika at Met.jpg 24 May 2004 5 April 2012
(died in office.)
7 years,316 days 2004 United Democratic Front
2009 Democratic Progressive Party [2]
4 Joyce Banda
(1949–)
Joyce Banda August 2012.jpg 7 April 2012 31 May 2014 2 years,54 days People’s Party
5 Peter Mutharika
(1939–)
Peter Mutharika 2011 (cropped).jpg 31 May 2014 Incumbent 4 years,103 days 2014 Democratic Progressive Party

Standards

Shutdown averted as President Trump signs budget bill

WASHINGTON-(MaraviPost)-President Donald Trump has signed a sweeping budget bill approved by Congress to re-open the government after it was briefly closed overnight.

According to BBC, the Federal funding for government services expired at midnight (05:00 GMT), after the Senate missed a voting deadline.

The 650-page plan proposes an increase in spending on defence and domestic services of about $300bn (£215bn).

The shutdown, which lasted five hours, was the second under the Republican-controlled Congress this year.
Winners and losers from the January shutdown

What does a government shutdown cost?

The president, who signed the bill early on Friday, said the military “will now be stronger than ever before”.

The bipartisan measure is the fifth temporary government funding measure for the fiscal year, giving lawmakers until March 23 to draft a full-year budget.

The bill had been expected to pass before the midnight deadline but senators struggled with last-minute objections from Republican Rand Paul, which meant they could not vote in time.

The shutdown came within three weeks of the last one. Lawmakers have wrangled over the spending plan and other political demands from either side.

The House approved the bill by 240 votes to 186. The Senate had passed it by 71 to 28 three hours earlier.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, a top Republican, said the bill was “a great victory for our men and women in uniform” as the military would get more resources.

He said: “Ultimately, neither side got everything it wanted in this agreement, but we reached a bipartisan compromise that puts the safety and wellbeing of the American people first.”

Politicians from both opposing parties criticised Senator Paul for slowing the bill up and provoking the shutdown.
Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill said “it looked like he was clueless”, while Republican Senator John Thune called the shutdown “a colossal waste of time”.

Why were budget hawks opposed to the bill?

While the spending bill’s funding for the Pentagon delighted the national security wing of the party, fiscal conservatives were concerned about ramifications for the nation’s debt.

In a doom-laden speech, Senator Paul angrily charged his fellow Republicans with fiscal profligacy, accusing his colleagues of “spending us into oblivion”.

“I ran for office because I was very critical of President Obama’s trillion-dollar deficits,” he said.
“Now we have Republicans, hand-in-hand with Democrats, offering us trillion-dollar deficits.

“I can’t in all good honesty, in all good faith, just look the other way just because my party is now complicit in the deficits.”

This would be “the very definition of hypocrisy”, he added.

US spending-hike budget a ‘monstrosity’, say budget hawks.

What’s in this bill?

The 650-page spending plan was only unveiled on Wednesday night, so the finer details are still unclear.

White House legislative affairs director Marc Short said the package would increase spending by “just shy” of US$300bn.

The Washington Post put the figure at half a trillion dollars.

The bill contains $165bn of additional defence spending and $131bn in domestic spending, including funding for healthcare, infrastructure and tackling the US opioid crisis, reports Reuters news agency.

The proposal would raise the US debt ceiling until March 2019.

Why were some Democrats unhappy?

Despite the support of their Senate leader Chuck Schumer, who said the budget accord will “break the long cycle of spending crises”, some Democrats have complained that the bill does not address immigration.

The party’s leader in the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, said on Thursday morning that she was opposed to the plan, but would not order rank-and-file Democrats to vote against it.

The California congresswoman called for the bill to include a provision shielding so-called Dreamers, young immigrants who entered the US illegally as children, from deportation.

Her remarks came a day after she told the stories of immigrants for eight hours on the floor of the lower chamber in a record-breaking speech.

Obama-era guarantees for those immigrants were cancelled by US President Donald Trump and are set to become invalid next month.

Illinois representative Luis Gutierrez, one of the leading congressional advocates for immigrants, urged colleagues to vote against the plan.

“Don’t collude with this administration,” he said.

What would a shutdown have meant for ordinary people?

Many government agencies close during a shutdown as their future funding is theoretically not secure. Many employees are asked not to come to work and will not be paid – although some get back pay.

Employees deemed essential – including military personnel and air traffic controllers – are required to work regardless of shutdowns.

It was unclear which agencies would close on Friday if the shutdown continued into the working day.

MP tells govt to act on Chief Lundu’s remarks against Goal Malawi

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-The main opposition Malawi Congress Party (MCP) Member of Parliament (MP) for Dowa East, Richard Chimwendo Banda, has cautioned that the over zealousness of some traditional leaders has the potential to shrink the operating space for non-government organisations (NGOs) in the country.

In Parliament yesterday, Chimwendo Banda, who also chairs the Parliamentary Committee on Social Welfare and Community Development, demanded to know what the government is doing to mend the relationship between chiefs and NGOs.

In an unsuccessful supplementary question to Minister of Local Government and Rural Development, Kondwani Nankhumwa, the lawmaker cited Paramount Chief Lundu’s recent outbursts, when he took issues with international NGO, Goal Malawi.

“I would like to know what the government is doing on [working on] the relationship between chiefs and NGOs. I have in mind the scenario where the [Paramount] Chief called an international NGO stupid in the presence of the President.

“Chiefs threatening or insulting NGOs is a very big threat to the development of this country. It has the potential to shrink space for the NGOs. What measures is the government putting in place to ensure that there is a good relationship between the Chiefs and NGOs?” Chimwendo Banda said.

But second deputy Speaker of Parliament, Clement Chiwaya, told Chimwendo Banda that his supplementary question was a policy question not related to the construction of markets and upgrading of trading centres questions that Nankhumwa initially responded to.

Mozambique denies doing business with North Korea

WASHINGTON — Mozambique is denying allegations that it continues to do business with North Korea in violation of U.N. sanctions.

A CNN report published this month found that North Korea has signed contracts worth millions of dollars in Mozambique, funneled the money through diplomatic channels and used profits from fishing vessels off the Mozambican coast to fund its nuclear program.

But Mozambique’s deputy minister of foreign affairs and cooperation, Maria Manuela Lucas, denied that her government has made any agreements with North Korea that violate sanctions. She said Mozambique welcomes outside monitoring.

“The Mozambican government recently invited the U.N. panel to visit Mozambique to see the work that the country is doing to be able to collaborate with this panel.

The panel has recently been assembled and will also publish a report of the last meeting. The panel promised to visit Mozambique this quarter,” said Lucas.

She also said her government is working with private Mozambican businesses to educate them about the sanctions and shut down illegal operations.

The report also alleges that North Korea is providing military training to elite Mozambican forces and offering technical support to the military.

A previous U.N. report alleged that North Korea and Mozambique had a military partnership worth at least $6 million.

North Korea used a shell company to sell weapons, including missiles, radar and air defense systems, according to the report.

Mozambican opposition figures seized on the CNN report as evidence of the ruling Frelimo Party’s corrupt and inept leadership.

“It shows lack of seriousness on the part of our government, by our rulers, who establish shady business on the fringes of what are the international rules, which can somehow penalize the image of Mozambique,” said Fernando Bismarques, a spokesman for the Democratic Movement of Mozambique, an opposition party.

The United States, which has led the charge for tougher sanctions against North Korea, declined to comment specifically about the Mozambique case, but said it would continue to hold countries accountable.

“All U.N. member states are required to implement sanctions resolutions in good faith, and we expect them all to do so,” a U.S. State Department official said.

“We continue to call on all countries, including Mozambique, to take the appropriate steps to apply maximum pressure on the DPRK including reducing economic ties.”

Mia denies sealing a MK30 million deal with Nkasa to sing pro-MCP songs

BLANTYRE-(MaraviPost)-The main opposition Malawi Congress Party (MCP) member Muhammad Sidik Mia has come out of his cocoon to trash social media reports alleging that he has sealed a MK30 million deal with veteran musician Joseph Nkasa to start composing pro-MCP songs.

Yesterday the social media was awashed with reports that Mia held a secret meeting with pro-DPP music star Joseph Nkasa where they discussed a number of issues one of it being for the artist to change his goal post and start praising MCP.

According to information at hand, Nkasa agreed to the deal upon receiving MK30 million from Mia.

Writing on his official facebook page, Mia trashed the reports saying its fake news aimed at tarnishing his image.

“That Musician Joseph Nkasa made a courtesy visit at my office yesterday is true.

“However, that Nkasa signed a 30 million kwacha deal to start singing pro MCP songs as some news outlets on the social media are reporting, is outright FAKE news,” wrote Mia.

He added: “We all know Nkasa. He is way above the age of majority and I think he is guided by his conscious to do what he thinks is right. Whether his conscious will lead him to release pro MCP songs is his personal choice and I have nothing to do with that except respecting his choice.

“However, what is misleading and fallacious is to assume that his visiting my office means we were signing a multi-million kwacha deal. It is simply cheap propaganda which you, my revered followers on this page, must ignore.”

George Bush: ‘pretty clear evidence Russia meddled’ in US election

WASHINGTON-(MaraviPost)-George W Bush has said there is “pretty clear evidence that the Russians meddled” in the 2016 US presidential election, forcefully rebutting Donald Trump’s denials that Moscow tried to affect the vote.

While never mentioning Trump by name, Bush, the US president from 2001 to 2009, appeared to be pushing back at Trump’s attempts to foster warmer relations with Russia.

The White House did not immediately comment on Bush’s remarks. “There’s pretty clear evidence that the Russians meddled,” Bush said at a talk in the United Arab Emirates.

“Whether they affected the outcome is another question. It’s problematic that a foreign nation is involved in our election system. Our democracy is only as good as people trust the results,” he said.

Bush said the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, had “a chip on his shoulder because the demise of the Soviet Union troubles him.

Therefore, much of his moves [are] to regain Soviet hegemony

He stressed the need to back Nato and other alliances the US has with the rest of the world. Putin was “pushing, constantly pushing, probing weaknesses. That’s why Nato is very important,” Bush said.

South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma could quit within days- ANC

PRETORIA-(MaraviPost)-South Africa’s Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa says he is holding direct talks with embattled President Jacob Zuma over a transfer of power.

President Zuma has faced increasing pressure to quit since December, when Ramaphosa replaced him as leader of the ruling African National Congress (ANC).

South Africa had seen “systematic looting” under Zuma’s rule, and he “must go sooner rather than later”, it said in a statement.

The best guess here is that Zuma, who is facing multiple corruption charges, may be looking for some sort of legal guarantees, although an amnesty is not an option in South Africa.

Ramaphosa, already sounding like the country’s new president, said both he and Zuma were aware of people’s anxieties, and the need for a speedy resolution in the “coming days”.

Of MCP infighting and need for independent crisis management

By Kelvin Sulugwe

The infighting in the main opposition Malawi Congress Party (MCP) is a very good sign that the party is democratic, but needs an independent crisis management, damage control team If you asked me.

I would be very slow to tell you why I have decided to write this piece today, but it has to be enlightened and I have taken a very sober minded stand in what is happening in the party right now.

At first, I was very concerned with the ongoing fights that have given birth to factions such as that of Richard Msowoya, Gustav Kaliwo, Sidik Mia and Jessie Kabwira, but now.

I decided to take it from another angle. This is a sign of mature democracy in the party. It means MCP is indeed very democratic and that people are able to take different stands against matters, unlike other parties where blind loyalty is the uniform for patriotism. It should be noted that in a democracy, everyone is able to express his/her views, but at the end, it is the majority view that prevails.

The majority will speak at the coming convention, for now, here is what I wish to put forward. For starters, it was very disturbing when a letter written by the Vice President Hon Richard Msowoya leaked to the media.

One should be of the view that such high profile communication should be safeguarded with the utmost confidentiality the two sides can afford. I will not stand here to accuse a side that leaked the letter, because I have no idea who did.

It might be the side of Hon Msowoya who leaked it to buy public sympathy or it might be the other side that leaked it to make Msowoya less matured. We move on. Then, after the letter, came the decision (not officially communicated) that the party decided to fire Kaliwo, suspended the rest.

The most disturbing occurrence was the fact that even party youths were pictured going to the headquarters, carrying banners that called for the blood of Kaliwo out of the party.

This is where I am afraid and like some people have observed, indeed, MCP lacks political strategists that are able to manage party crisis. What happened, if the firing is true and the news of possible impeachments are simply wrongs that will be added to the first wrong, of Vice Presidents letter being leaked to the media.

In the end, two wrongs do not make a right. We will sink from one level to another and at the end; we will be bruised to the ground. What people like me expected were not meetings to fire the other fractions. I will explain something later on that. Sometimes, political moves should not be very obvious.

When they become very predictable, we the opponents can easily lead the way, while making it look like we are the ones making such decisions. When Sidik Mia first joined the party and the rumours for possible fights started going viral, MCP hosted a political rally that had all these giants together.

That was very brilliant and it pained our major opponent to that fact that he changed direction of trying to disturb the party. MCP is a big threat to Progressive Democratic Party (DPP). I can say this a million times even in my sleep. It is the party that Malawians are looking up to.

Let me tell you something. No matter how the DPP can try to convince Malawians of the atrocities of MCP, we will come to one fact, the people who did such atrocities are no longer in MCP.

Hon Dr Lazarus Chakwera was not there when MYP terrorized Malawians. Hon Msowoya was not there, just like Hon Eisenhower Mkaka, Jessie Kabwira and most of the current MCP members were not there when this happened.

On top of this, not many people who are bound to vote in 2019 were there. I was young and never felt whatever people describe about MCP and I know there are lots of people like me who were not there.

Ofourse I can remind you some of the people who were there in such a time and I can easily bring to memory people such as Hon Nicholus Dausi, Hetherwick Mtaba and Dr Bakili Muluzi. They were there and of late, Hon Nicholus Dausi has received his compensation package for being there.

Today, he stands on a podium and saays he will reveal what MCP did. I can’t wait to hear what he did. Now, it is evident that what we have is a transformed MCP, with completely new ideas.

God has served the party and cleansed it. He has chased the bad omens, most of who run to DPP and are now standing on podiums and promise to reveal what they did in the name of MCP of their time. Someone is very afraid and it is at this point that MCP needs to be very serious in decision making and strategies.

I suggest, since it is already a rumour that the vice president has been fired, it remains such, let MCP fire and suspend no one. Instead, conduct three massive rallies in the north, central and south.

Tell people that we understand of the infighting currently rocking the party, but the party is working on it and very soon, everything will be sorted out. Tell people no one has been fired or suspended make sure that at such rallies, all the people should be present.

Invitations should be extended to Richard Msowoya, Kaliwo, Kabwira and the rest of them. Let there be no impeachment at parliament and pretend like nothing happened. This will indeed be a new song for a democratic party in Malawi.

If someone has eaten money from DPP, they will be put to shame, especially if they refuse to attend such rallies. Such a move will cripple all efforts for public sympathy and will send a strong message to people that MCP is ready to govern. Then we know that at the end of the day, general convention will say it all.

Believe me, Kaliwo is not a threat and I doubt he can even win back his post at general convention, the same way I doubt he can be of use to DPP. What they are enjoying now is fame and platform that party decisions are giving to them.

They don’t deserve such a decision and it is love and tolerance to their noise that will cripple them, if indeed they are making noise.

No matter what, Dr Chakwera should not be afraid, he has the support of many and come convention, he will be elected president once more. Sidik Mia also has more chances of beating Msowoya nice and clean to be the vice president.

Kaliwo can’t beat Mkaka on Secretary General Posts. In the end, these are simply my views, anything can happen. It is my prayer that MCP will now think of having a crisis management and damage control team, far from the NEC, an independent party body that should come in to sort out issues involving the NEC members.

Dr Chakwera is no way in a position to chair a meeting involving him and his vice president Msowoya. Again, party youth, with no political understanding of crisis management and winning strategies should not dictate what happens to people who speak against certain party decisions. We want to win in 2019 and we can only do it by being democratic, like we have always been.

Lastly, let not MCP be pushed to an early convention. We will do it when time comes. Long Live MCP, Long life to Dr Chakwera.

President Jacob Zuma ‘agrees to go’

PRETORIA-(MaraviPost)-President Jacob Zuma will resign as soon as a list of preconditions has been finalised, in a deal struck on Tuesday between Zuma and African National Congress (ANC) leader Cyril Ramaphosa and confirmed by sources on Tuesday night.

The deal led to the postponement of an ANC national executive committee (NEC) meeting scheduled for the following day to force Zuma’s removal from office.

That meeting had been due to take place at the Mount Nelson Hotel in Cape Town and would have heard a recommendation from the ANC’s national working committee that Zuma be removed as head of state.

The meeting between Zuma and Ramaphosa took place after Speaker of the National Assembly Baleka Mbete announced the postponement of the state of the nation address, which Zuma would have delivered on Thursday.

Zuma spent Tuesday morning in Tuynhuys dealing with Cabinet committee meetings. Afterwards, he left for Genadendal, his official residence in Cape Town. Ramaphosa met Zuma there after 4pm alongside ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule.

On Tuesday evening, Magashule told TimesLIVE that the meeting between the two presidents had been “constructive and robust”.

“I was there… I left the two presidents to engage and I joined the meeting towards the end,” he said.

Magashule said Zuma and Ramaphosa agreed that the decision to postpone the state of the nation address was correct.

“They also agreed that the urgent NEC [meeting] called should be postponed after their constructive discussion,” he said.

Magashule would not confirm whether Zuma had agreed to resign, although other ANC leaders indicated that the deal that was struck would see Zuma “go in a dignified way”.

He did, however, indicate that the discussion between Ramaphosa and Zuma deferred the pressing need for the NEC to discuss his exit.

The secretary-general would not say who would deliver the state of the nation address once a new date is announced.

South Africa postpones State of Nation address amid battle to oust President Jacob Zuma

CAPE TOWN-(MaraviPost)-South Africa on Tuesday, Feb 6, postponed its State of the Nation address, the keynote political event of the year, as the ruling African National Congress (ANC) party is roiled by a battle to unseat President Jacob Zuma.

Zuma, in power since 2009, is fighting for his survival and faces the risk of soon being ousted from office by his own party after multiple graft scandals.

According to Straits Times, as president, Zuma had been due to deliver the State of the Nation address to parliament in Cape Town on Thursday.

Meanwhile, the Nelson Mandela Foundation has called for South Africa’s controversial President Zuma to quit as he faces growing pressure to stand down.

South Africa had seen “systematic looting” under Mr Zuma’s rule, and he “must go sooner rather than later”, the foundation said.

The governing ANC party has called a meeting of its top body for Wednesday to decide on Mr Zuma’s future.

The president has so far resisted calls to quit over corruption allegations. Mr Zuma has repeatedly denied corruption allegations.

MCP pens MACRA against new introduced MBC program ‘Sapita Kawili’

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-Malawi’s main opposition Malawi Congress Party (MCP) has written the Malawi Communications Regulatory Authority (Macra) against the new program known as ‘Sapita Kawili’ that the tax-funded Malawi Broadcasting Corporation (MBC)) is expected to air through its television.

The program is aim at disclosing how Malawians were victimized in the one party era under the MCP administration.

The ‘Sapita Kawili’ program openly inform Malawians not to vote for MCP into power because of the its past behavior.

MCP further attack MBC for refusing to open up the airwaves for the opposition parties and that its content is largely biased towards the ruling party.

In a letter dated 1 February, 2018 and signed by MCP second deputy secretary general Eisenhower Mkaka to Macra director general Godfrey Itaye, the public broadcaster is also airing some programs such as Chinduji, Manifesto Yanu and Ndikati Chete which have been biased .

The party warned that the infamous Rwandan genocide was propelled by the use of the media.

“Radios were airing programmes which were promoting hate against each other,” said Mkaka citing a research of Thomas Hauschildit.

“Thus, MBC out to know how hate messages they are trying to promote all in the name of sprucing DPP image would put this nation on fire,” reads the letter.

MCP reminds Macra to keep MBC “in check” as it is legally required to provide unbiased coverage to all parties because it is run on tax payers’ money.

Mkaka said they have reported the matter to the regulator in the spirit of being “preventive and progressive”.

MCP further reminded Macra that it has summoned Zodiak and Times media houses “when there were complaints.”

“We look forward to your expeditious and adequate action,” reads the MCP letter to Macra.

Media expert Lowani Mtonga said that the battle to free MBC needs practical action.

“The lack of editorial independence and opening up of MBC airwaves is against the spirit of Communications Act and the Constitution. The Communications Act clearly spells out under Section 87 of the public mandate of MBC to operate without any bias or serve any political interests.

“Secondly, MBC ignores the Constitution which categorically states that everyone has the right to freedom of expression and that the media has the right to publish freely. This entails MBC to be neutral and serve public interests regardless of people’s political views,” Mtonga argued.

He said MBC as a public broadcaster is falling short of the mandate as a platform for public discourse.

Effort to talk to Itaye proved futile.