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

Karonga Paramount Kyungu refutes government critics’ fools jibe

By Lusekero Mhango

Paramount Chief Kyungu of Karonga and Chitipa districts on Friday rebuked quotes attributed to him in the Daily Times of January 31 2018 to have allegedly referred to Government critics as fools.

The Paramount Chief allegedly uttered the remarks on Sunday during the official opening of the Karonga Stadium where Minister of Local Government and Rural Development Kondwani Namkumwa officially opened the facility.

The alleged remarks have attracted condemnation from the public at large and activist and on Wednesday the local newspaper Daily Times carried a front page article and editorial criticizing the Chief on the alleged insulting words.

However speaking at a press briefing that the Paramount organized accompanied by traditional chiefs including TA Kilipola among others in Karonga, Kyungu refuted the words and then has challenged the media to produce the recording clip.

“The claim that I called government critics fools boarders on character assassination, creating hate, anger and even with the possibility of physical elimination of the source of the claim,” he lamented.

“I never said government critics are fools I never, I did not I could not and will never ever make such irresponsible statements because I was among many Malawians exiled for fighting for Multi-party democracy in this country,” he continued.

He said having been a government critic himself under the regime of Kamuzu Banda he cannot turn around now and start labeling government critics as fools therefore was shocked with the statement attributed to him.

“I expect the media to quote words that have been attributed by the person not to put words in the mouth unless the intention of the publication is solely to injure and damage the person,” he blasted.

However when this reporter seeked the views of Daily Times Managing Editor George Kasakula on the publication his mobile phone after several attempts couldn’t be reached upon the publication of the story.

Speaking to Tuntufye community radio reporter, Kasakula disclosed that his institution has the recorded clip and will not apologize.

Road to 2019 elections: Umodzi Party ready to be adopted by DPP

Umodzi Party leader Professor John Chisi says his party is ready to work with the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) claiming the two parties have similar manifesto and agenda.

Speaking in an interview on Friday, Chisi said there is no different with what his party would have done if won the 2014 tripartite elections with whatever the ruling DPP government is currently doing.

He mentioned about issues of building technical colleges in each constituency as one of the similar development plan in the two parties’ manifesto.

“We are ready to work with DPP if they want us. We have one agenda and manifesto but we shall wait from them, “he said.

He then commended the government of professor Peter Mutharika for commissioning the gensets saying this is good development for Malawi especially at this time when the country is facing persistence blackouts.

The Umodzi Party leader said this will create business and there will be employment as investors will come to invest in the country.

Chisi said his party cannot work with the main opposition Malawi Congress Party (MCP) because he is not aware of its manifesto.

He declared to contest as a member of parliament for Blantyre City South east constituency under his party.

DPP spokesperson Francis Katsaira was not picking his mobile phone for a comment.

Chisi is well known in attacking MCP and its leader Dr Lazarus Chakwera on Malawi Broadcasting Cooperation (MBC) television and radios.

Namibia President bans public officials’ foreign trip

President Hage Geingob has banned public officials from all foreign business travel in a bid to rein in government spending.

Namibia is facing such a severe financial crisis that its army has conceded that it can no longer buy food for soldiers or pay water and electricity bills at its bases.

Thousands of army personnel will therefore be sent on leave next month while those already on holiday have been told not to report for duty.

“No request for outbound travel by ministers, deputy ministers and other political office bearers will be considered until after the end of February,” a presidency statement said.

Geingob has stopped using the presidential jet, and went to the African Union summit, which ended on Monday, in a scheduled commercial flight.

According to BBC which quoted the AFP, he would only go on essential foreign trips, and with smaller delegations, his spokesman Albertus Aochamub said.

Government debt levels have been soaring in recent years, leading to investor warnings about the economic outlook of the southern African state.

Moody’s rating agency downgraded its debt to junk status in August.

Malawi women dancers, a recipe for political deception; President Peter Mutharika one step forward and two backwards

By SAUNDERS JUMAH the Utopian

Women of Malawi particularly those who are seduced to be dancing at political rallies must be stopped as they are “curry and recipes” for our politicians to be lying and cheating the nation.

The commissioning of the 55 diesel generating megawatts was not supposed to be of pomp and jovial because it is too late too long for the president who lied that this was going to happen late December 2017.

Worse still the 55 megawatts are not going to make any dent on the shortage of power in the country.

The hunger for power in a population of 17 million inhabitants stand at 3500 megawatts as of now if our nation was to develop.

With the 55 expensive megawatts we stand at 220 megawatts nationally which calls for no vigour or singing songs at all.

President Peter Mutharika was not supposed to be received by desperate citizens with songs of gratitude when commissioning the generator because he lied at the first place, he is allowing thieves in suits steal billions that could enhance and add more energy on the grid.

Malawi women! You are more important than singing for thieves. You are the group that is severely punished whether it is in the kitchen, homes, offices and business places. Seeing you dancing and ululating to a man who moves one step forward and speedily moves two steps back backwards is a big shame to you.

“A song, “kungobwera a Peter Mutharika magetsi kuyaka” is “cheap and stupid praises” that will make the president feel is ruling stupid and dead people.

President Peter Mutharika must be awaken to know that this is “An awakening era” no mistakes are tolerated by a servant of the people.

Commissioning of the 55 megawatts was not supposed to attract any citizen to Chichiri, to make the president realize that we are not his fools.

To make matters worse the president did not apologize to the nation for his lies, he made a promise at a ceremony where women danced with “thanks in advance” sometime in October 2017 about electricity problems to be over by December.

At the end of January 2018 citizens converge at Chichiri to dance for a man who lied, as the lies are not shameful enough to him he extends again to May 2018. I don’t see any reason for citizens to welcome such president with those lies.

The damage that has occurred from October to date cannot be repaired hence there is no need for people to keep such a failing leader with praises and songs.

Peter Mutharika was supposed at least to apologize or indicate why his promise could not materialize on time as promised to show that he is leading a nation of men and women of dignity. Failure to apologise Peter Mutharika is insulting our nation’s integrity and dignity.

A young democracy in South Africa grills all public servants who lies, give false promises, who steals, involved in corruption by active institutions such as parliamentary committee and judicial branches.

Malawi is more mature under democracy why are we failing to grill and take to task the likes of George Chaponda, Richard Makondi, the Gani family that has Guptad our nation, the Kossam who are holding us (owners of the land) hostage?

Billions of Kwachas have been stolen, the president who commissioned the expensive 55 megawatts is involved in cash gate of MK577 billion, he is a next of kin for the further stolen MK92 billion stolen by his late brother, he still presides an administration that is continuously plundering our nation in billions, should that kind of a leader be danced and ululated for providing little while he steal more? No! No! Malawians let us not clap hands for this nonsense.

We are awake now. Time of clapping hands for pain went with Kamuzu Banda, this time anyone and everyone including president Peter Mutharika, ministers, members of parliament, principal secretaries, ambassadors, chiefs, councillors, first ladies, police and military, whoever is misusing our taxes must be held accountable with punitive sentence if found guilty.

Time of clapping hands for nonsense is gone. Our nation is in shame for lack of proper services, roads, irrigation dams, food, good governance, development, rampant unemployment, our genius in schools chased, medicine in hospitals, social security and many more ills.

We do not need to be smiling where we are meant to show our anger. We do not need to keep quite where we see nonsense, we do not need to fear where there is need to express the truth, we do not need to keep quite where there is need for voicing, we do not need to fear death when we are trapped to it, we do not need to treat the government with kid gloves when it is punishing and killing us with corruption and state looting.

Until the day president Peter Mutharika or any other president who will rule Malawi start to treat citizens with respect, dignity and integrity we will return the same.

Women must stop shaming our nation with their dancing culture, it is making our leaders play with us, it make them think we are fools and stupid.

Electricity problems must completely stop that is the time any president deserve pat on the shoulder not now when we are still living in blackouts.

SAUNDERS JUMAH the Utopian
MALAWI ENGAGEMENT GROUP [MAENGA]
DEFENDERS OF THE FUTURE OF MALAWI
charity begins in our hearts not in the rallies.

My thoughts on MCP wrangles; of Chakwera-Mia or Chakwera-Msowaya combination

By Mankhumbo Munthali

Social and political commentator, Mankhumbo Munthali is unpacking insights behind the main opposition Malawi Congress Party (MCP) wrangles. This is how Munthali has outlined facts behind the tension in the oldest party.

1. The reason MCP seems to prefer Sidik Mia to Richard Msowoya is because Malawi Congress Party (MCP) thinks Chakwera-Mia combination is better off than Chakwera-Msowaya combination in as far as chances of winning 2019 elections is anything to go by. This is coupled by the “monetary prowess” of Mia which they think is strategic in funding MCP campaign.

2. MCP does not prefer Mia to Msowoya based on principles. If you ask any MCP supporter who supports Chakwera-Mia combination: why do you prefer Mia to Msowoya?

They will not tell you that Mia is a man of principles, with a sound political track record(or someone with a vision to transform Malawi) . All they will tell you is, “we need him to shake the lower-shire and South to support MCP in 2019. Besides, we need his money for campaign”.

If truth be told, these MCP diehards know deep down their hearts that -just like one Ken Lipenga or Mpinganjira – Sidik Mia is also a recycled politician who lacks principles.

3. It is not true as suggested by some MCP diehards that the reason MCP or Chakwera is preferring Mia to Msowoya is because Msowoya has done nothing to make the party popular (especially in the North).

Even if Msowoya had made MCP popular in the North with the coming in of Mia he wouldn’t have been considered for the running-mate.

This would however not been because Chakwera hates the North or Msowoya (as i had ably argued a few weeks ago that i have not seen any trait of tribalism or regionalism in Chakwera) but rather because the current thinking within MCP is that apart from North and Centre they need to penetrate part of South (especially lower shire) in order to overcome DPP in the next elections.

These MCP strategists think that while you don’t necessarily need to get a running-mate from the North in order to win the North vote(Refer to 2009 and 2014 North voting patterns), they think Sidik Mia would add value in bringing the much needed votes from Lower-shire and Muslim community hence stand a better chance of winning the elections.

4. It is not true as suggested by some quarters that Richard Msowoya is a champion of “constitutionalism” in MCP in the face of his boss who seems to have no regard for that.

While it is true that Msowoya has recently used the party Constitution to check Chakwera’s dictatorial tendencies on how he has handled the recent wrangles in the party, precedence suggests that Msowoya is not what his sympathisers believe him to be (a staunch defender of constitition in the party) but rather he is fighting his personal battles (political survival for running-mate).

It is well-known truth that Msowoya remained mum (silence may mean consent, they say) when Chakwera started flouting the party’s constitution in the way he handled Kaliwo, Kabwira and the team. No where did we hear Msowoya condemning (as a defender of party constitutionalism as his sympathisers wants us to believe.) his boss for going against the party constitution in the way he handled the so-called rebellious group.

During this period Msowoya was secured that he already had the running mate position and in a typical Afican way of politicking he had to be loyal to his boss.

It was however until when Mia announced his joining of MCP when Msowoya changed tunes. Taking advantage of Msowoya’ insecurity Kabwira and Kaliwo joined Msowoya in a rally in the North where they declared their allegiance to Msowoya as MCP 2019 running-mate.

Since then Msowoya found an ally in Kaliwo-Kabwira and others in pushing for both his own political survival as runningmate in 2019 and of his allies. Otherwise, if there was no Mia-factor i tell you Msowoya would not have been in Kabwira-Kaliwo camp. Bwenzi naye atayima pangodya za “obedience, loyalty and discipline” while his boss and party are raping the party constitution.

5. As i had said last time, the fact that MBC and DPP gurus are sympathising with Msowoya-Kaliwo camp by giving them positive coverage does not necessarily mean they believe in intra-party democracy or constitutionalism. Rather they prefer to face Chakwera-Msowoya combination to Chakwera-Mia combination in 2019 elections. Chakwera-Mia combination is politically bad news to them.

When all is said and done, the question remains do these political settlements mean anything to an ordinary Malawian? What is the place of the ordinary poor Malawian in Lupembe (Karonga), Thyolo or Ntchisi in these political settlements? Whose interests do these political settlements serve?
Yesterday at 6:44pm

Two main opposition African leaders congratulate ‘Raila odinga’ for taking a Presidency Oath

BBC-(NAIROBI)-Two African opposition leaders have congratulated the self-declared president of Kenya, Raila Odinga who on Tuesday took a controversial presidency oath.

The National Super Alliance (NASA) leader made the oath in front of thousands of people who gathered at Uhuru Park in the country’s capital Nairobi.

The government had warned that Odinga`s illegal inauguration is an offence that could attract a death penalty.

But despite the recent inauguration being illegal, two of known African opposition leaders have congratulated Odinga on becoming people`s president.

Stating on his Twitter account, Uganda’s Opposition leader, Kizza Besigye, applauded the NASA leader stating: “No one can doubt that these people have their president – People’s President! A result of election results that aren’t believable. Making the point an important part of the struggle for democratic transition.”

In 2016, Besigye took a similar oath of office in Kampala as the people’s President.

Also South Africa’s Opposition leader Julius Malema also celebrated Odinga for being bold and on his new title.

“Congratulations the people’s President of Kenya Raila Odinga, no amount of fraud will undermine the will of the people forever,” he noted.

Malema, the leader of Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party, highlighted that the event was a demonstration of the people’s will.

Meanwhile, the Kenyan government has still maintained its decision to keep all the state TV`s shut until further developments.

DPP critics are fools- Paramount Chief Kyungu

KARONGA-(MaraviPost)-Paramount Chief Kyungu of Karonga and Chitipa has said people who are bent on pointing at flaws of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) government are fools.

Speaking during the official inauguration of the MK610 million Karonga Stadium on Sunday, Kyungu said such people have eyes but are not able to see the good that the current administration is doing for the country.

The Ngonde leader reiterated that the government critics do not wish this country well, arguing if they did, they would advise the government constructively instead of adopting what he termed a militant approach.

But social commentator Moses Mkandawire of Church and Society in the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian has described the sentiments as unacceptable and demeaning to the traditional leadership structure.

“I say time and time again that those who have eyes to see but pretend that they are not seeing [any development initiatives championed by the government] are fools. If God has given you eyes, use them to see, that is human nature.

“We must appreciate what the government is doing. When it is not doing enough, there must be a way of advising them. Not wholesale criticism. We, the people of Karonga, do not buy into that because even our elderly are able to see the development that the government is doing,” he added.

Kyungu’s sentiments have not gone down well with some quarters, with Mkandawire saying the paramount chief does not understand leadership and democracy.

He said Kyungu should be the first to appreciate that a good leader should be able to listen and embrace a diversity of opinion, saying that is what builds a nation.

“Let him learn from masters of traditional leadership like Chikulamayembe. That is a senior position and he is supposed to motivate his subjects. Such divisive remarks should not come from someone of his calibre,” Mkandawire said.

He added that democracy entails tolerance and peaceful coexistence among different people.

Mkandawire then warned that, as the political climate slowly turns volatile as 2019 approaches, traditional leaders should avoid making statements that can cause divisions and confusion among their subjects.

Kenya’s Raila Odinga ‘inaugurates’ himself as president

NAIROBI-(BBC)-Kenya’s main opposition leader, Raila Odinga, has declared himself the “people’s president” at a controversial “swearing-in” ceremony in the capital.

Thousands of his supporters attended the event, despite a government warning that it amounted to treason.

The authorities shut down TV stations to prevent live coverage of the event.

President Uhuru Kenyatta was sworn in for a second term last November. He won an election re-run in October, but Mr Odinga boycotted it.

Elections were first held in August but the courts ordered a re-run, saying Mr Kenyatta’s victory was marred by irregularities.

Holding a Bible in his right hand at a park in Nairobi, Mr Odinga declared that he was answering to a “high[er] calling to assume the office of the people’s president of the Republic of Kenya”.

People had had enough of election rigging and the event was a step towards establishing a proper democracy in the East African state, Mr Odinga told a cheering crowd.

Speaking earlier to Kenyan broadcaster KTN, Mr Odinga said his “swearing-in” was intended to “show the world that what we are doing is legal, constitutional and not something you can remotely describe as a coup”.

It was a public relations stunt that ended in disappointment for many opposition supporters, says the BBC’s Alastair Leithead in Nairobi.

Mr Odinga turned up for just 20 minutes. He signed a statement, swore an oath and left the stage, leaving his supporters wondering why it was such a low-key affair, he adds.

His deputy, Kalonzo Musyoka, was not at the event, and Mr Odinga said Mr Musyoka would be “sworn-in” at a later date.

However, his absence suggested there were divisions in Mr Odinga’s National Super Alliance, our correspondent says.

One of them, Larry Oyugi, said there was nothing illegal about Tuesday’s event: “We have warned the police enough and we are also going as per the constitution. The constitution of Kenya, article one, allows all Kenyans to exercise their power directly.

“This is why we are here to exercise our powers by gathering here and also article 37 allows peaceful assembly. We are citizens of this country, we are allowed to peacefully assemble here and elect our president as per the constitution.”

Police allowed the event to take place, despite warning earlier that they would prevent it from going ahead.

Three privately owned television stations – NTV, KTN and Citizen TV – went off air from around 09:10 (06:10 GMT), BBC Monitoring reports.

Citizen TV told the BBC the authorities had forced them off the air over plans to cover the gathering.

It live streamed the event on its website, and on YouTube and Facebook.

KTN viewers watched their screens fade to black as the news presenter read a statement confirming that the national communications authority was switching off transmission.

Switching off the broadcasting signals of media organisations is unusual in Kenya, the BBC’s Anne Soy reports from Nairobi.

Threats have been made in the past and some media groups have been raided but none have had their signal deliberately disrupted.

Kenyan journalists have denounced the move as outrageous and in a statement called for “respect of the constitution” and an end to the “unprecedented intimidation of journalists”.

There was tension in Kenya on Tuesday as some schools closed in the capital because of the event, and people did not know what to expect, our correspondent says.
Why is the election result disputed?

Mr Kenyatta was officially re-elected with 98% of the vote on 26 October but just under 39% of voters turned out. He was inaugurated in November.

His victory is not recognised by Mr Odinga, who argues he was elected by a small section of the country.

Mr Kenyatta also won the original election on 8 August but that result was annulled by the Supreme Court, which described it as “neither transparent nor verifiable”.

When the repeat vote was called, Mr Odinga urged his supporters to shun it because he said no reforms had been made to the electoral commission.

Correspondents say the election dispute has left Kenya deeply divided. About 50 people are reported to have been killed in violence since the August ballot.
‘Undermining authority’

Mr Kenyatta will see Mr Odinga’s action as undermining his authority, but it is unclear whether the government will risk plunging Kenya, East Africa’s biggest economy, into a deeper crisis by arresting the opposition leader.

Mr Odinga, on the other hand, will relish his self-declared honorific, “people’s president”. Other than that, it is unclear what he has gained from the “swearing-in”.

In fact, he seems to have been abandoned by other opposition leaders, who skipped his “inauguration”.

As for President Kenyatta, his legacy will be stained as a result of the media shutdown.

Mugabe ‘never made mistakes’, says Zim President Mnangagwa

HARARE-(News24 Africa)-Two months after pushing aside his former boss in a military takeover, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa still carefully maintains that Robert Mugabe made no mistakes while he was in power.

The new Zimbabwe leader does, however, repeat the line that those around the former president took advantage of his advanced years to usurp some of his powers.

Mugabe, 93, had been in power for 37 years when he woke up to find he was under house arrest by the military last November. He was eventually persuaded to step down to allow the former vice president to take over – even though Mugabe had recently sacked him.

Mnangagwa, 75, has said he’ll hold free and fair elections later this year.

Sputnik news agency whether there were any mistakes Mugabe made that he would not want to repeat, Mnangagwa replied: “No, the president never made any mistakes.”

Mnangagwa repeated his claim that a small cabal around Mugabe’s wife Grace had taken advantage of the former president’s advancing years. That’s a reference to the G40 faction of Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party that was bitterly opposed to Mnangagwa’s Lacoste faction.

Until the military takeover on November 15, G40 appeared to have the upper hand, ready to take over power should Mugabe die or step down.

“We were having persons (other than the president) who were making executive decisions, which is against the constitution of the country,” Mnangagwa told Sputnik.

He said that “hundreds and hundreds of thousands” had marched in support of the military takeover in protest against this.

“Our people reacted to people usurping power, which is not given to them by the constitution, so this was corrected by the masses of Zimbabwe,” he said.

Liberia President George Weah cuts his own salary

MONROVIA — Liberia’s newly sworn-in President George Weah pledged to cut his own salary by a quarter Monday, in a nationwide address in which he warned of tough times ahead for a “broke” country.

“The state of the economy that my administration inherited leaves a lot to do and to be decided,” the former international soccer star said in an address apparently aimed at lowering high expectations following his election victory at the end of last year to replace Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

“Our economy is broken; our government is broke. Our currency is in free fall; inflation is rising,” Weah said. “Unemployment is at an unprecedented high and our foreign reserves are at an all-time low.”

Weah had promised a crackdown on endemic corruption as he was sworn in a week ago to the cheers of thousands of exuberant supporters crammed into a stadium in the capital, Monrovia.

But since winning the poll in the poor, coastal West African nation, the award-winning former AC Milan and Paris St. Germain striker has been at pains to show just how daunting he understands the task ahead to be.

“In view of the very rapidly deteriorating situation of the economy, I am informing you today, with immediate effect, that I will reduce my salary and benefits by 25 percent,” Weah said, pledging the savings to a development fund for Liberia.

The announcement of a pay cut for himself is likely go down well on a continent long used to officials in high office awarding themselves with fabulous pay rises and perks.

Liberia suffered civil wars from 1989 to 2003 that killed hundreds of thousands of people. Then, as it was recovering in the past decade, it was hit by low prices for its chief exports, iron ore and rubber, and a 2014-16 Ebola outbreak.

Africa’s oldest republic was established by freed slaves from the United States and declared independent in 1847. As a quirk of that history, only “people of color” are constitutionally allowed to become Liberian and only Liberians can own property.

Weah described these clauses as “unnecessary, racist and inappropriate” for a Liberia in the 21st century. He said he would push to allow all races to apply for Liberian citizenship and for foreigners to be allowed to own property.

Nobel Peace Prize winner Johnson Sirleaf, barred from running again, was applauded for shoring up peace but criticized for failing to tackle graft or do much to spread economic gain beyond her elite circle to millions living in poverty.

Despite his avowedly grim outlook on the economy, Weah pledged a $3 billion coastal road project that would link the capital to its remote southeast.

“This is going to be very challenging,” he said. “But I am convinced that with the assistance of friendly governments and institutions this can be achieved before the end of my tenure.”