Kamuzu Chibambo re-elected as PETRA President

BLANTYRE (MaraPost)–Law practitioner, Kamuzu Chibambo has been re-elected as People’s Transformation Party (PETRA) President and 2014 presidential candidate after beating his opponent Haster Chidzakazi during the party’s national conference held Saturday in Blantyre.

Chibambo, who has practiced law in the country for over 30 years, got 116 votes against Chidzakazi’s 26.

 

PETRA becomes the fifth political party among over 50 registered parties to conduct a national convention after ruling People’s Party (PP), United Democratic Front (UDF), Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and New Labour Party (NLP), respectively.

Malawi will conduct its first ever tripartite polls on May 20 this year.

In 2004, PETRA was part of the Mgwirizano Coalition whose presidential was Gwanda Chakuamba, but this time around Chibambo

Eureka! Atheists, secular humanists know God better

In recent times atheists and Secular Humanists have accused the monotheistic community—Muslims, Christians, and Judaists—of caricaturing their position about God. In short, atheists and Secular Humanists clarified that all what they say is that they “do not have an idea about God” and nowhere have they claimed that “God does not exist” as their monotheistic friends would want the world believe.

Unlike their recanted position, I find their clarified position, honestly speaking, greatly theistic. How so? The demystification of “have no idea” would most certainly give an answer as to how this is so.

So, what is it to “have an idea” or, in the alternative, to “have no idea”? I must admit, this is no simple question. However, experience should tell us that the difficulty of a question does not imply let alone entail the absence of an answer; it simply calls for one to think outside the box, that’s all there is!

Interestingly, it is stimulating to consider the question in the alternative to be in direct touch with the atheists and Secular Humanists for they too argue in the alternative. Now to the question. To “have no idea” presupposes two things, namely; to consider something ‘news’ and to be unconvinced of the narratives about the thing.

To Consider Something ‘News’

Sometimes we are asked about things we neither know nor ever imagined they exist. In such scenarios, the modest answer has mostly (or always?) been “I’ve no idea”. In this situation, to “have no idea” is to tell the other party that one considers ‘news’ the thing s/he is being asked about.

Thus, to “have no idea” in this case means to seriously have no knowledge of the thing or entity asked about. Or more precisely, it means to accept having no faint idea about the thing asked. Here one who “has no idea” would be expected to develop interest and do a little bit of research to dig information about the thing.

Applying the above to atheists and Secular Humanists, one would expect them to dig information about God. Judging by how they spot ‘grand inconsistencies’ in the Holy Books of the revealed religions, one would hardly be wrong to argue that they indeed dug information about God. The above leads us to reflect on the second understanding of “having no idea” which is to be unconvinced of the narratives about the thing.

To be Unconvinced of the Narratives about the Thing

As the heading itself suggests, to be unconvinced of the stories about the thing implies either the ‘gift of thinking’ or knowledge of the ‘gist of the thing’. By ‘gift of thinking’ I mean to be able to use ones rational and intellectual capacity to inform ones beliefs and ideologies about life. And to know the ‘gist of the thing’ is to know the essence of thing.
Accordingly, to argue that one “has no idea” about something on the basis that the narratives about the thing defy logic and/or that one’s knowledge about the nature of the thing contradicts the propagated narratives is acknowledging, implicitly or otherwise, the existence of the idea about the thing.

For atheists and Secular Humanists, the ‘gift of thinking’ more likely happens to bethe guiding philosophy in their have-no-idea-about-God assertion. Here, they contend that monotheists’ assertions that God is Almighty, Omnipresent, and Omniscient simply does not logically add up given the suffering on earth. Consequently, they have rushed to conclude that having an idea about God is ultimately a great insult to thinking. They thus have accused monotheists of suspending thinking and following instincts blindly.

And Now the Caveat…

In arguing that an Omnipresent, Omnipotent, and Omniscient God cannot let the earth to suffer, the atheists and Secular humanists covertly affirm that a God of such attribute indeed exists. In so arguing, the atheists and Secular humanists do solemnly declare that such a God exists and proceed to posit that the suffering on earth should not be there given such attributes.

Thus, atheists and Secular Humanists have and intelligent understanding of God as a perfect being; one who cannot be associated with evil, suffering, wars etc. Hence, as can be seen from here, their position is that a perfect God cannot be associated with imperfections. To this end therefore, I find it tempting to conclude that when all is said and done, atheists and secular Humanists have a better understanding of God!

However,they appear to haveproblems openlyasserting about the perfectness ofGod as they fail to marry that perfection with the suffering on earth. For this reason, as a matter of hiding behind this supposed ‘unmarryability’, they have strongly accused Godof being indifferent to the suffering of humanity.

But is God really indifferent? Negative. A parent prescribes a destiny for his or her child and yet gives him or her free choice. And sometimes when the child goes astray the parent allows him or her to suffer not out of malice or indifferent but out of love. The parent does this to remind the child to use his or her free choice in such a way that such choices lead him/her to the destiny as the parent prescribed.

Similarly, the suffering on earth does not in any way defeat the ‘caringness’, the ‘lovingness’, or the omnipotence of God; perfection and suffering, as in the parent-child analogy, marry. God lets humanity to suffer to remind it that it has strayed from Him and that it has misused and abused the free will He gave them in order to search the destiny He carved for them.

Perhaps monotheists lack the word to convey the message to our atheist and Secular Humanist friends, but, most certainly, these our dear friends know God as a perfect Being, or maybe, better than that.

 

Mtumiki wa Mulungu anena za amene adzapambane chisankho cha u president ku Malawi pa 20 May chaka Chino

LILONGWE (MaraPost)—Prophet Austin Liabunya wauza dziko la Malawi pa yemwe adzapambane Chisankho chimene chili nkudza miyezi ikubwelayi pa 20 May 2014. Mtumiki wa Mulunguyu wanena izi pa wayilesi ya Galaxy FM dzulo pamene amafotokoza za Mapemphero amene anakoza olowera Mchakacha chtsopanochi amene anachitikira ku Area 23, mu Mzinda wa Lilongwe. Prophet Liabunya anacheza ndi Mtolankhani wa Galaxy radio bambo Gerald Viola motere.

GVIOLA: Kodi inu ndamva mumalosera, chiyambireni Ulosiwanu zoonadi zidachitika ndiziti?

PROPHET: Zonse zomwe ndimalosera zimachitika chifukwa samakhala ine onenayo koma Mulungu. Ndinali woyamba kulosera za Imfa ya Mtsogoleri wadzikolino pa 12 November 2011 koma anthu anati ndinali wamisala.Ndinafotokozanso za mmene Ulamuliro umayenera kuyendera kuti anthu ena adzafuna kuti woyenera kulowa pa Udindo wa President asalowe komabe sizidzatheka malinga ndi malamulo, izi zinachitika ndithu.

GVIOLA: Anthu ena akuti inuyo posachedwapa mwatulusa Ulosi wanu, kodi ukuti bwanji Ulosi umenewu:

PROPHET: Ulosiwu ndinaunena mu October wa 2013 mpaka 2016. Ulosiwu ukunena za mavuto omwe aMalawi akhale akukumana nao oposa nthawi ya Mmbuyomu pamene tiri ndi Utsogoleri ulipowu ndipo anthu adzauchotsa Utsogoleri ulipowu okha kudzera pa voti. Komanso ndikufotokoza zambiri mpaka 2016 za momwe zinthu zikhalire nchaka cha 2014 chifukwa Chipani china pomafika nthawi ya Chisankha chidzakhala ndi Nkhope zanyowani zokhazokha onse alipo odziwikawa atachoka.

GVIOLA: Tinamva kuti inu munalosera zakuchoka kwa Vice President wina wa Chipani ndikuti Vice Presidentyo akakalowa Chipani, Chipanicho chikawina Chisankho, kodi izi ndizoona?
Yes, ndinaloseradi zimenezo ndipo aMalawi ndi Mboni. Palibe Vice President wacHipani yemwe wachoka panopa?

GVIOLA: Mukunena Wolemekezeka a Cassim Chilumpha kapena?

PROPHET: Mulungu amandiuza zomwe anthu angakumanenazo munyengo inayake ndiye za Chilumpha sindidatchule dzina, Anthuo ndimaaonatu mmaso mwangamu koma sindingaatchule maina koma zonse ndimalosera zikutsatizidwa.

GVIOLA: Inutu mwina mukuphatikiza ndi Using’anga inu? Mumadziwa bwanji zakutsogolo?

PROPHET: KKKKKK Nanga Uzimu tingauphatikize bwanji ndi Using’anga? Nzosatheka zimenezo.

Mulungu amandiunikira ndiye ndimalankhula pofuna kuchenjeza anthu kuti akonze zomwe akulakwitsa zija ndiye ngati anthu sasintha amakumanadi ndi zokhoma zija koma Mulungu amafuna kuti munthu uja asinthe moyo wake, safuna kuti munthu apeze mavuto ayi ndithu ,mwachitsanzo: Ngati ulosi ungati udzagundidwa ndi galimoto, ukuyenera kupewa ngoziyo pokonza mtimawako. Mulungu samgafune kuti ugundidwe ndi galimoto, koma ngoziyo imachitikabe pamene iwe wapulumuka ngati unasintha kayendetsedwe ka moyo wako.

GVIOLA: Ngatidi inuyo mukutumidwa ndi Mulungu kuti muzilosera, yemwe apambane Upresident mChisankho cha chaka cha Mawa ndani?

PROPHET: Yemwe apambane ndi amene mbalewake anakhalapo kale President mMalawimuno.
GVIOLA: Mwati yemwe bamboake anakhalapo kale pa Mpando wa Upresident?

PROPHET: A Viola, ndati yemwe mbalewake anakhalapo kale President ndiyemwe awine chaka cha mawa, zambiri ndikanena ku Area 23 ku Cross Over Service, anthu abwere mwaunyinjiwao adzamve zomwe Mulungu akawayankhule zokhudza moyowao ndizokhuza Dzikolao.

The Lies Behind The West’s War On Libya

It was Gaddafi’s Libya that offered all of Africa its first revolution in modern times – connecting the entire continent by telephone, television, radio broadcasting and several other technological applications such as telemedicine and distance teaching. And thanks to the WMAX radio bridge, a low cost connection was made available across the continent, including in rural areas.

It began in 1992, when 45 African nations established RASCOM (Regional African Satellite Communication Organization) so that Africa would have its own satellite and slash communication costs in the continent. This was a time when phone calls to and from Africa were the most expensive in the world because of the annual US$500 million fee pocketed by Europe for the use of its satellites like Intelsat for phone conversations, including those within the same country.

 

An African satellite only cost a onetime payment of US$400 million and the continent no longer had to pay a US$500 million annual lease. Which banker wouldn’t finance such a project? But the problem remained – how can slaves, seeking to free themselves from their master’s exploitation ask the master’s help to achieve that freedom? Not surprisingly, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the USA, Europe only made vague promises for 14 years. Gaddafi put an end to these futile pleas to the western ‘benefactors’ with their exorbitant interest rates. The Libyan guide put US$300 million on the table; the African Development Bank added US$50 million more and the West African Development Bank a further US$27 million – and that’s how Africa got its first communications satellite on 26 December 2007.

China and Russia followed suit and shared their technology and helped launch satellites for South Africa, Nigeria, Angola, Algeria and a second African satellite was launched in July 2010. The first totally indigenously built satellite and manufactured on African soil, in Algeria, is set for 2020. This satellite is aimed at competing with the best in the world, but at ten times less the cost, a real challenge.

This is how a symbolic gesture of a mere US$300 million changed the life of an entire continent. Gaddafi’s Libya cost the West, not just depriving it of US$500 million per year but the billions of dollars in debt and interest that the initial loan would generate for years to come and in an exponential manner, thereby helping maintain an occult system in order to plunder the continent.

African Monetary Fund, African Central Bank, African Investment Bank

The US$30 billion frozen by Mr Obama belong to the Libyan Central Bank and had been earmarked as the Libyan contribution to three key projects which would add the finishing touches to the African federation – the African Investment Bank in Syrte, Libya, the establishment in 2011 of the African Monetary Fund to be based in Yaounde with a US$42 billion capital fund and the Abuja-based African Central Bank in Nigeria which when it starts printing African money will ring the death knell for the CFA franc through which Paris has been able to maintain its hold on some African countries for the last fifty years. It is easy to understand the French wrath against Gaddafi.

The African Monetary Fund is expected to totally supplant the African activities of the International Monetary Fund which, with only US$25 billion, was able to bring an entire continent to its knees and make it swallow questionable privatisation like forcing African countries to move from public to private monopolies. No surprise then that on 16-17 December 2010, the Africans unanimously rejected attempts by Western countries to join the African Monetary Fund, saying it was open only to African nations.

It is increasingly obvious that after Libya, the western coalition will go after Algeria, because apart from its huge energy resources, the country has cash reserves of around €150 billion. This is what lures the countries that are bombing Libya and they all have one thing in common – they are practically bankrupt. The USA alone, has a staggering debt of $US14,000 billion, France, Great Britain and Italy each have a US$2,000 billion public deficit compared to less than US$400 billion in public debt for 46 African countries combined.

Inciting spurious wars in Africa in the hope that this will revitalise their economies which are sinking ever more into the doldrums will ultimately hasten the western decline which actually began in 1884 during the notorious Berlin Conference. As the American economist Adam Smith predicted in 1865 when he publicly backed Abraham Lincoln for the abolition of slavery, ‘the economy of any country which relies on the slavery of blacks is destined to descend into hell the day those countries awaken’.

Regional Unity as an Obstacle to the Creation of a United States of Africa

To destabilise and destroy the African union which was veering dangerously (for the West) towards a United States of Africa under the guiding hand of Gaddafi, the European Union first tried, unsuccessfully, to create the Union for the Mediterranean (UPM). North Africa somehow had to be cut off from the rest of Africa, using the old tired racist clichés of the 18th and 19th centuries ,which claimed that Africans of Arab origin were more evolved and civilised than the rest of the continent. This failed because Gaddafi refused to buy into it. He soon understood what game was being played when only a handful of African countries were invited to join the Mediterranean grouping without informing the African Union but inviting all 27 members of the European Union.

Without the driving force behind the African Federation, the UPM failed even before it began, still-born with Sarkozy as president and Mubarak as vice president. The French foreign minister, Alain Juppe is now attempting to re-launch the idea, banking no doubt on the fall of Gaddafi. What African leaders fail to understand is that as long as the European Union continues to finance the African Union, the status quo will remain, because no real independence. This is why the European Union has encouraged and financed regional groupings in Africa.

It is obvious that the West African Economic Community (ECOWAS), which has an embassy in Brussels and depends for the bulk of its funding on the European Union, is a vociferous opponent to the African federation. That’s why Lincoln fought in the US war of secession because the moment a group of countries come together in a regional political organisation, it weakens the main group. That is what Europe wanted and the Africans have never understood the game plan, creating a plethora of regional groupings, COMESA, UDEAC, SADC, and the Great Maghreb which never saw the light of day thanks to Gaddafi who understood what was happening.

Gaddafi, the African Who Cleansed the Continent from the Humiliation of Apartheid

For most Africans, Gaddafi is a generous man, a humanist, known for his unselfish support for the struggle against the racist regime in South Africa. If he had been an egotist, he wouldn’t have risked the wrath of the West to help the ANC both militarily and financially in the fight against apartheid. This was why Mandela, soon after his release from 27 years in jail, decided to break the UN embargo and travel to Libya on 23 October 1997. For five long years, no plane could touch down in Libya because of the embargo. One needed to take a plane to the Tunisian city of Jerba and continue by road for five hours to reach Ben Gardane, cross the border and continue on a desert road for three hours before reaching Tripoli. The other solution was to go through Malta, and take a night ferry on ill-maintained boats to the Libyan coast. A hellish journey for a whole people, simply to punish one man.

Mandela didn’t mince his words when the former US president Bill Clinton said the visit was an ‘unwelcome’ one – ‘No country can claim to be the policeman of the world and no state can dictate to another what it should do’. He added – ‘Those that yesterday were friends of our enemies have the gall today to tell me not to visit my brother Gaddafi, they are advising us to be ungrateful and forget our friends of the past.’

Indeed, the West still considered the South African racists to be their brothers who needed to be protected. That’s why the members of the ANC, including Nelson Mandela, were considered to be dangerous terrorists. It was only on 2 July 2008, that the US Congress finally voted a law to remove the name of Nelson Mandela and his ANC comrades from their black list, not because they realised how stupid that list was but because they wanted to mark Mandela’s 90th birthday. If the West was truly sorry for its past support for Mandela’s enemies and really sincere when they name streets and places after him, how can they continue to wage war against someone who helped Mandela and his people to be victorious, Gaddafi?

Are Those Who Want to Export Democracy Themselves Democrats?

And what if Gaddafi’s Libya were more democratic than the USA, France, Britain and other countries waging war to export democracy to Libya? On 19 March 2003, President George Bush began bombing Iraq under the pretext of bringing democracy. On 19 March 2011, exactly eight years later to the day, it was the French president’s turn to rain down bombs over Libya, once again claiming it was to bring democracy. Nobel peace prize-winner and US President Obama says unleashing cruise missiles from submarines is to oust the dictator and introduce democracy.

The question that anyone with even minimum intelligence cannot help asking is the following: Are countries like France, England, the USA, Italy, Norway, Denmark, Poland who defend their right to bomb Libya on the strength of their self proclaimed democratic status really democratic? If yes, are they more democratic than Gaddafi’s Libya? The answer in fact is a resounding NO, for the plain and simple reason that democracy doesn’t exist. This isn’t a personal opinion, but a quote from someone whose native town Geneva, hosts the bulk of UN institutions. The quote is from Jean Jacques Rousseau, born in Geneva in 1712 and who writes in chapter four of the third book of the famous Social Contract that ‘there never was a true democracy and there never will be.’

Rousseau sets out the following four conditions for a country to be labelled a democracy and according to these Gaddafi’s Libya is far more democratic than the USA, France and the others claiming to export democracy:

1. The State: The bigger a country, the less democratic it can be. According to Rousseau, the state has to be extremely small so that people can come together and know each other. Before asking people to vote, one must ensure that everybody knows everyone else, otherwise voting will be an act without any democratic basis, a simulacrum of democracy to elect a dictator.

The Libyan state is based on a system of tribal allegiances, which by definition group people together in small entities. The democratic spirit is much more present in a tribe, a village than in a big country, simply because people know each other, share a common life rhythm which involves a kind of self-regulation or even self-censorship in that the reactions and
counter reactions of other members impacts on the group.

From this perspective, it would appear that Libya fits Rousseau’s conditions better than the USA, France and Great Britain, all highly urbanised societies where most neighbours don’t even say hello to each other and therefore don’t know each other even if they have lived side by side for twenty years. These countries leapfrogged leaped into the next stage – ‘the vote’ – which has been cleverly sanctified to obfuscate the fact that voting on the future of the country is useless if the voter doesn’t know the other citizens. This has been pushed to ridiculous limits with voting rights being given to people living abroad. Communicating with and amongst each other is a precondition for any democratic debate before an election.

2. Simplicity in customs and behavioural patterns are also essential if one is to avoid spending the bulk of the time debating legal and judicial procedures in order to deal with the multitude of conflicts of interest inevitable in a large and complex society. Western countries define themselves as civilised nations with a more complex social structure whereas Libya is described as a primitive country with a simple set of customs. This aspect too indicates that Libya responds better to Rousseau’s democratic criteria than all those trying to give lessons in democracy. Conflicts in complex societies are most often won by those with more power, which is why the rich manage to avoid prison because they can afford to hire top lawyers and instead arrange for state repression to be directed against someone one who stole a banana in a supermarket rather than a financial criminal who ruined a bank. In the city of New York for example where 75 per cent of the population is white, 80 per cent of management posts are occupied by whites who make up only 20 per cent of incarcerated people.

3. Equality in status and wealth: A look at the Forbes 2010 list shows who the richest people in each of the countries currently bombing Libya are and the difference between them and those who earn the lowest salaries in those nations; a similar exercise on Libya will reveal that in terms of wealth distribution, Libya has much more to teach than those fighting it now, and not the contrary. So here too, using Rousseau’s criteria, Libya is more democratic than the nations pompously pretending to bring democracy. In the USA, 5 per cent of the population owns 60 per cent of the national wealth, making it the most unequal and unbalanced society in the world.

4. No luxuries: according to Rousseau there can’t be any luxury if there is to be democracy. Luxury, he says, makes wealth a necessity which then becomes a virtue in itself, it, and not the welfare of the people becomes the goal to be reached at all cost, ‘Luxury corrupts both the rich and the poor, the one through possession and the other through envy; it makes the nation soft and prey to vanity; it distances people from the State and enslaves them, making them a slave to opinion.’

Is there more luxury in France than in Libya? The reports on employees committing suicide because of stressful working conditions even in public or semi-public companies, all in the name of maximising profit for a minority and keeping them in luxury, happen in the West, not in Libya.

The American sociologist C. Wright Mills wrote in 1956 that American democracy was a ‘dictatorship of the elite’. According to Mills, the USA is not a democracy because it is money that talks during elections and not the people. The results of each election are the expression of the voice of money and not the voice of the people. After Bush senior and Bush junior, they are already talking about a younger Bush for the 2012 Republican primaries. Moreover, as Max Weber pointed out, since political power is dependent on the bureaucracy, the US has 43 million bureaucrats and military personnel who effectively rule the country but without being elected and are not accountable to the people for their actions. One person (a rich one) is elected, but the real power lies with the caste of the wealthy who then get nominated to be ambassadors, generals, etc.

How many people in these self-proclaimed democracies know that Peru’s constitution prohibits an outgoing president from seeking a second consecutive mandate? How many know that in Guatemala, not only can an outgoing president not seek re-election to the same post, no one from that person’s family can aspire to the top job either? Or that Rwanda is the only country in the world that has 56 per cent female parliamentarians? How many people know that in the 2007 CIA index, four of the world’s best-governed countries are African? That the top prize goes to Equatorial Guinea whose public debt represents only 1.14 per cent of GDP?

Rousseau maintains that civil wars, revolts and rebellions are the ingredients of the beginning of democracy. Because democracy is not an end, but a permanent process of the reaffirmation of the natural rights of human beings which in countries all over the world (without exception) are trampled upon by a handful of men and women who have hijacked the power of the people to perpetuate their supremacy. There are here and there groups of people who have usurped the term ‘democracy’ – instead of it being an ideal towards which one strives it has become a label to be appropriated or a slogan which is used by people who can shout louder than others. If a country is calm, like France or the USA, that is to say without any rebellions, it only means, from Rousseau’s perspective, that the dictatorial system is sufficiently repressive to pre-empt any revolt.

It wouldn’t be a bad thing if the Libyans revolted. What is bad is to affirm that people stoically accept a system that represses them all over the world without reacting. And Rousseau concludes: ‘Malo periculosam libertatem quam quietum servitium – translation – If gods were people, they would govern themselves democratically. Such a perfect government is not applicable to human beings.’ To claim that one is killing Libyans for their own good is a hoax.

President Jacob Zuma’s 2014 New Year message

Fellow South Africans,

The year 2013 has come to an end.

It has been a momentous year, filled with both successes and challenges, as we continued to work together to build a united, non-racial, non-sexist, democratic and prosperous South Africa.

We will tomorrow, on 1 January, begin an important year, during which the country will celebrate 20 years of freedom and democracy and the successes we have scored.

We will reflect on how our freedom and democracy were achieved and the progress we have made in the past 20 years.

We will also reflect on how we will continue to work together as a nation to implement our Vision 2030, as outlined in the National Development Plan.

Our country is today a much better place than it was before 1994.

Life has changed for the better for millions of South Africans, but some of our people are still waiting.

Therefore, our work is not yet completed.

We must continue working together in 2014, to build the South Africa of our dreams.

Informed by the National Development Plan, we must continue to build a South Africa which inspires people to achieve greater things for themselves and for their country.

We must continue to build a society where there is work.

A society where everyone would be able to continue to make a meaningful contribution to the development of the country, because they would have been provided with the tools they need to reach their full potential, such as education.

This is the society we must continue to build together, taking forward the legacy of our much loved former President and late father of our young nation, Tata Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela.

We are still coming to terms with our loss of this remarkable human being and world icon, and one of the greatest leaders to be produced by our country and the African continent.

It is not going to be easy to have another Nelson Mandela in our lifetime. However, he lives on in our hearts.

The values he stood for must guide our work as we continue to build on his legacy. In his memory, we must continue to reconcile and to unite our rainbow nation and to deepen non-racialism.

More importantly, unity must be the rock upon which our nation is built, to borrow from Madiba’s own words.

South Africans must unite beyond the barriers of race, creed, gender or class, so that we can succeed in confronting head on, together, the challenges that face our beautiful country.

We must also, in Madiba’s memory, work harder than ever before, to build a caring society which loves, protects and develops its children.

They are our nation’s greatest resource and our future. Children were also Madiba’s greatest love. In them, he saw the foundation of a new nation.

We should also continue to build even stronger relations with the world, building on Madiba’s achievements as a citizen of the world and a global icon who opened up our country to many new friends and development partners.

As we start the new year, let us also remember one of the pivotal rights we gained in 1994, which Tata Madiba could only exercise for the first time in his 70s -, the right to vote.

Those who have not yet registered since the opening of the registration period must make use of the opportunity which is open until February, so that they can exercise their hard-won right to vote on Election Day.

Those who are using the roads during the festive season, please ensure your safety and that of other road users.

The holiday period road carnage has to stop and all road users must play their part by obeying the rules of the road.

Compatriots and friends,

Let me take this opportunity to wish all in our country, a successful and prosperous 2014!

I thank you.

Good bye 2013, the year of crisis with Malawi interim president Joyce Banda and never was breakthrough

Goodbye 2013! Atleast you have proved us that JB is not a leader rather a liar. She lied to Malawians that her government was sending the youth to work in South Korea and she had struck a deal when it was all lies than a political wishful thinking.

Goodbye 2013! With you we have proved that JB is not a leader rather a Cash gate godmother, her government used people to loot billions meant for poor Malawians, use them to buy their party cars and made us believe that the gods had smiled at them through well wisher.

Goodbye 2013! With you we have seen a president turned a witness in attempted murder case, why the president among all? Should we say she had a hand in the failed murder attempt of Paul Mpwiyo? It was with you when she told the nation she knew who shot Mpwiyo and later withdrew the sentiment claiming she never said that. What a powerful liar in Africa.Oooh! 2013.

Goodbye 2013! With you we have seen the president having free maize strictly for her party followers in her rallies while Admarc and selling point remained without the commodity, we have seen Malawians dying of hunger and prisoners staying days without food under governments watch. That was in December, what more with February yet to come?

Goodbye 2013! With you we have seen the president trapped in all sorts of scams and shady deals, talk of cash gate, the iron sheet scam for Mudzi, bell portinger reputation management, the fire arms deal,5 star hotel, chamba smuggle, the presidential jet scandal, unknown well wishers chartering her planes. You name it. Just all in 2013′

Goodbye 2013! Its you who had made our servants stay months without pay with JB, it was with you we had seen almost strikes of civil servants every month somewhere and primary school pupils going in the street to demonstrate. You have been a year full of Malodza where even the dead were cut private parts right in the mortuary.

Goodbye 2013. With you we have seen how JB and her homeland security ministry have failed us, how many people have we lost with mob justice? How many have been lost by being shot or stubbed to death by robbers? How many arm robberies, abuse of office, corruption and rape cases have we had in the year? So numerous and where was the Police boss, the minister and the whole ministry when all these were happening? Honestly the citizens have been let down.

Goodbye 2013! Atleast we are assured that you are gone and you will never cause the tribulation and suffering Malawians have gone through.

Thanks that you have shown us that JB is a total failure and not worthy transforming the nation and the citizens, this was not a year of breakthrough rather crisis. Malawi is almost dead now.

Enjoy the drama and 2014.

Over 7.5 Million registered for upcoming 2014 Tripartite Elections

The Malawi Electoral Commission is informing the public that registration for the 2014 Tripartite Elections ended on December 18, 2013 at the end of phase 9 of the voter registration drive.

During the exercise, the Commission registered a total 7,537,548 voters nationwide. This represents 94.10 percent of the projected total for the exercise which was 8,009,734 registrants. The total registered is also 16 percent above the 6,500,759 voters in 2010.

 

Of the total registered voters, 3,481,365 are men representing 46.19 percent while 4,056,183 are women representing 53.81 percent.

Registration started on July 22, 2013 and covered nine phases of 14 days each.

Detailed registration figures for each centre, ward and constituency for the entire registration exercise have been uploaded on MEC website www.mec.org.mw.

The Commission is urging stakeholders to exercise caution with the statistics because they are based on preliminary information captured during field operations and might change during computerization exercises.
The Commission wishes to thank: all persons who presented themselves for voter registration, civil society organizations who mobilized people to register,

traditional leaders for their active participation in motivating people to register, political parties that mobilized people to register and all registration staff (District Elections Supervisory Teams, Quality Control Managers, Camera Operators, Supervisors and Clerks). Their participation contributed to make the exercise a success.

Muckracking Extra: Abiti’s annus horribilis

Forgive the cliché but a day is a day too long in politics.

For Joyce Banda September 13 is her Summer Solstice, her longest day of the year, for it is this day that dramatically changed her political fortunes.

Her newly-appointed Budget Director was coming home from a night out with the boys when some yet-to-be identified people tried to cut him down. Those four bullets not only drew blood from Paul Mphwiyo’s body but also kicked open a Pandora’s Box.

The domino effect from that unprecedented shooting was breath-taking. Suddenly stacks and stacks of money started showing up in impossible places like car boots and under beds.

We trust the courts will disambiguate the linkage between the shooting of the youthful socialite and technocrat and the attendant discovery of massive plunder of public resources.

Suffice to say, however, that all pointers show that the two are connected – somehow.

Connected? Again the court, we trust, will show us how.

But cashgate, if truth be told, will be a factor in May 2014. Abiti can spin it around to sell herself as someone who uncovered the rot in government and got to the bottom of it. (That is, if she gets to the bottom of it before May 20, 2014.)

Her opponents, on the other hand, will also use the same to tell the voters that on her watch it was “open sesame’ on public resources. It was ‘anything goes’ as if there was no gate-keeper.

So cashgate cuts both ways, if you get my drift, but I am not too sure if that makes 2013 a year of break-throughs for Abiti. It looks more like annus horribilis for her in my book.

Happy New Year!

Kaka versus Kaka

“I hope that

in this year to come,
you make mistakes,
because
if you’re making mistakes,
then you’re making new things”
Neil Gaiman, English author

Look, whatever spin PP can spew out, the ruling party is not ending the year looking good. The MCP was a butt of jokes for PP apologists when one Chris Daza defected.

“How can a whole Secretary General quit?” went the refrain.

Well and good, but how then do we explain the departure of a whole provincial vice president? A crisis? A game-changer? Maybe a break-through!

By the way, I must say I was impressed by the reaction of Hophmally Makande, the PP prolocutor, on the departure of PP Vice President (Central Province) Cassim Chilumpha. “We’re saddened,” he told a radio station. “We’ll miss his talents.”

But the party’s Chief Executive proved that PP is as ordinary as they come. Good riddance to bad rubbish, Secretary General Paul Maulidi seemed to say when he described Chilumpha as “lazy”.

Really? When did the orange team realise that Kaka was “lazy”? Why wait until he showed you his back before you told him how useless he was?

Instead of being petty the party – through its CEO Maulidi, should have engaged in some serious soul-searching. How could a senior member quit a ruling party only months to a crucial election? What does that tell you about the pedigree of the party?

Let us consider for a while Kaka’s reasons for quitting, that Abiti was openly campaigning for his bosom friend-turned-nemesis Fahad Assani. If indeed President Banda preferred Fahad over Cassim she should have used the tried and tested Bakili Muluzi doctrine.

Here is how I mean: The self-styled political engineer was faced with a similar dilemma when he wanted his son, Atupele Austin, to stand as an MP for the Machinga East constituency.

The incumbent, Thengo Maloya, was not only a political ally of Muluzi’s but also a senior member of the then ruling UDF. Using his legendary political engineering, Atcheya dangled an irresistible carrot before Thengo and shipped him out to Kowloon to become our man in Taiwan. A perfect win-win situation: Atcheya got his way, Thengo was happy too, and Atupele was in Parliament.

Abiti, faced with the Kaka versus Kaka scenario, should have borrowed a leaf from the Atcheya School of Applied Politics. She should have called Cassim to Kamuzu Palace and put it to him, “Hey, look here, Bright – do you still answer to that name? You have been in the House for two decades. Hey, that’s even longer than I have been in that dreadful House! Look here, Cassim – or can I call you Bright? – I want to use you elsewhere. You know, Emmanuel Fabiano is retiring from the Unima. I want you there, Cassim. Can I make you Vice Chancellor while I try Fahad in Nkhotakota South?”

I am sure the reticent academic could have come out of that meeting not feeling like a condom, used and discarded without ceremony. Surely, with his presidential ambitions diminishing by the day, Kaka would have preferred to retire to the quietness of Zomba and leave the hustle and bustle of Parliament to the more extrovert Fahad.

Like Muluzi did with Thengo and Atupele, Ama could have chalked a win-win situation and preserved the unflinching allegiance of both Kakas.

But President Banda let Fahad square up with Cassim on the ground. C’mon, the stakes were too high for both dudes. Something – someone – had to give.

Chilumpha, as an incumbent MP, knew his CV could have been fatally bruised had he lost to Assani in the PP primaries. He knew he could beat his estranged buddy; in any case he has done that before.

But then he did not want to dance with fate. After all, the one he beat was an independent Fahad, not Fahad the trusty Justice Minister flying a national flag and backed by the most powerful woman around.

So he did not want to tempt fate. He chose to opt out.

Now, as a free agent and an incumbent, Cassim will be attractive to other parties, especially the UDF and the MCP. (DPP is not an option for Kaka, its godfather reduced him to surviving on Fanta, remember?)

Now PP has its work cut out for it in Nkhotakota South. The ruling party will not only have to fight against a resurgent MCP but also an angry former state and party veep. That is not a desirable fight even if you are Muhammad Ali, Joe Fraser and Mike Tyson rolled into one.

Abiti should be calculative and choosy of the battles she picks. Some of them are costly and needless and therefore avoidable. She must have Bakili’s number somewhere. She has to sound him up once in a while for tips on how he wriggled himself out of some impossible political logjams.

Some would argue, ‘but Atcheya did not always use conventional tactics’. Who said politics was conventional?

 

Our man Chakuchanya Harawa at the BBC: Malawi got talent

Some people’s lives are written in the stars. Ever since Chakuchanya Harawa stood in front of a studio microphone when he was 12, it was love at first sight. Today, when he talks into the microphone, the whole world listens.

“I played a small acting role in Theatre of the Air on Malawi Broadcasting Corporation (MBC) when I was 12. A few years later, I became a regular on the show and then I got a lead role on another popular weekly radio soap. I presented my first radio show on African Bible College FM station where I was studying communications,” Harawa explains the genesis of his remarkable story.

His break into a broadcasting career took off after he graduated from ABC College and had a short stint at Capital FM before finding his way to MBC.

During a scouting exercise that the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) conducted in Malawi 13 years ago, Chaku emerged as the sole victor, and has risen through the ranks to become one of the most reliable producers at the international radio station’s Network Africa segment.

“Life has its ups and downs, but overall it’s been a great ride. I love what I do. I also work with amazing people who share a passion for giving our audiences original, impartial and high-quality output—people from different parts of the world who are experts in various fields. Most importantly, it’s also been satisfying to be able to offer the organisation my expertise and skills for the benefit of our audiences,” he tells Society.

Over the years, Harawa, who is younger brother to famed drama legend Vipya Harawa, has played various roles in radio and television, working at the BBC’s Africa programnes Network Africa and Focus on Africa. He has had stints with global news programmes The World Today on radio, and BBC World News on World television.

Currently, Harawa works as senior broadcast journalist with the BBC’s TV programmes for Africa—BBC Swahili’s Dira ya Dunia and Focus on Africa on BBC World News—these programmes are rebroadcast by TV channels across the continent. He also does weekly global and African news analysis for a number of FM stations in Africa which rebroadcast the BBC’s radio programming.

“I’m grateful to God for the opportunity,” is his explanation for the opportunity he has had.

Harawa, who says he hails from T/A Mlumbe in Zomba although his late father came from Rumphi, has also been actively enhancing his academic credentials, studying for a Master of Arts degree in International Relations and World Order and Masters in Media Studies, both obtained in 2006.

The broadcaster, who calls himself an international affairs expert and multimedia journalist, notes that there is no specific moment which he can claim to be memorable as every day is a special moment.

“When you work in news and current affairs, every day is special. Some days are more intense than others, but the goal is to tell stories in a clear and unbiased manner. At the end of each working day, you feel really satisfied if that has been achieved. And that is the most important part of my work as a BBC news journalist,” he says.

But how does it feel being a trendsetter; the first, and so far, only Malawian to work at the BBC headquarters in London?

“It felt great when I got the job and became the first Malawian. But the party only lasted a day. The next day the focus shifted to the road ahead. I wish there were other Malawians, not only here but also at other international media organisations. Malawi has fantastic broadcast journalists who could easily work anywhere in the world.

“Over the years there have been Malawians at SABC, Radio Deuschewelle and other media organisations outside Malawi, and they have all done well. Those who’ve done it will tell you it’s an experience worth aspiring to. You learn and explore other ways of doing things. However, I must emphasise that working for an international broadcaster doesn’t necessarily mean that one is the best. There are many who have excelled working at home,” says Harawa, stressing that him being the only Malawian at the BBC made him work even harder.

“My being Malawian has no bearing at all on anything. It’d probably have been better if I’d found other Malawians upon joining, but I knew from day one that I was all by myself, so I simply had to get on with it. I’ve made friends from all corners of the earth and that has made things easier.”

For aspiring broadcaster, Harawa says there is no single prescription to success.
“Things work out differently for different people. Be prepared, so that when the right door opens you are able to walk through it with confidence. And the best preparation for tomorrow is to make sure today’s work is done.

“Work very hard. Read extensively and widely. Stay focused. Believe in yourself, even if it appears you are the only person who does so. Don’t underestimate what you can do. Think outside the box and do not limit yourself to one skill. Some of the finest broadcasters Malawi has ever produced were multi-skilled. Benson Tembo and Maria Chidzanja-Nkhoma for example were top DJs, but they also read news competently and could do many other things.”
Chaku, whose versatility is reflected in his other skills as a singer and recording artist, says his music is an attempt to fuse the Malawian traditional sound with Western elements.
“At college I sang and played guitar in a band called Chaku and the Afro-Praise Band and on a recent visit to Malawi, I was surprised that my music still enjoys considerable airplay,” he says.

And finally, the lessons learnt?

“Learning is a never-ending process. The lessons have been many, and I continue to learn from both good and bad experiences,” he muses.

Exit mobile version