Tag Archives: Bingu Mutharika

Ghost of Bingu haunts Callista: Widow suffers shameful defeat in MCP primaries

By Twink Jones Gadama

In a bizarre and shocking turn of events, Callista chapola, the widow of former president bingu wa mutharika, suffered a humiliating defeat in the Malawi Congress Party (MCP) primaries yesterday.

Sources close to the matter claim that the ghost of Bingu wa mutharika rose from the grave and flogged Calista, putting an end to her political aspirations.

Calista, who was once married to Bingu wa Mutharika and adopted the name Mrs. Mutharika by marriage, had defected to the mcp after her husband’s death.

Despite bingu’s well-known disdain for the mcp, Calista attempted to use his name and legacy to further her own political career.

However, her plans were dealt a severe blow when she lost the mcp primary elections.

Insiders claim that Calista’s defeat was not just a result of her lack of popularity among party members, but also due to the intervention of bingu’s ghost.

According to eyewitnesses, Calista was seen running out of the polling station, screaming and crying, claiming that she had been flogged by an invisible force.

While some have dismissed the claims as mere superstition, others believe that Bingu’s ghost was indeed responsible for Calista’s downfall. “This is not the first time we’ve warned Calista to stop using Bingu’s name for her own political gain,” said a source close to the mutharika family. “She refused to listen, and now she’s paying the price.”

The mcp has thus far refused to comment on the matter, but insiders claim that the party is relieved to be rid of calista, who was seen as a divisive figure within the party.

As for calista, her future in politics remains uncertain.

While some have speculated that she may attempt to revive her career with another party, others believe that her reputation has been irreparably damaged.

One thing is certain, however: the ghost of Bingu wa Mutharika will not be forgotten anytime soon.

Calista Chapola’s political gamble ends in defeat: What next?

Calista defeated

By Burnett Munthali

Calista Chapola, the former first lady and widow of the late Malawian President Bingu wa Mutharika, has suffered a major political setback after failing to secure a parliamentary candidacy under the Malawi Congress Party (MCP).

Chapola, who has navigated multiple party affiliations in recent years, had pinned her hopes on winning the MCP primary elections but was decisively defeated by Maria Nakwenda Kambuzi.

Chapola’s political journey has been anything but steady.

Originally a member of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which was founded by her late husband, she later shifted allegiance to the United Transformation Movement (UTM) in a move that signaled her dissatisfaction with the DPP’s direction.

However, her tenure in UTM was short-lived, and she soon defected to MCP, hoping to secure a parliamentary seat under its banner.

Unfortunately, her ambition was dashed when she managed to garner only 196 votes against Kambuzi’s commanding 485 votes.

This crushing defeat has left Chapola at a crossroads. If she still harbors parliamentary ambitions for the upcoming general elections, she faces limited options.

She could once again switch political parties in search of a new platform, though this would likely raise questions about her political consistency and credibility.

Alternatively, she could contest as an independent candidate, a path that would require significant resources and grassroots mobilization to stand a chance against well-established party candidates.

Chapola’s loss underscores the unpredictable nature of Malawian politics, where party loyalty and grassroots support often outweigh name recognition and past political ties.

As the 2025 general elections approach, all eyes will be on her next move.

Will she attempt another political reinvention, or will this defeat mark the end of her parliamentary aspirations? Only time will tell.

My Take On It: Appreciating Malawi presidents’ empathy, humanity, and love

                                                                                 

Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all who are destitute. Speak up and judge fairly; defend the rights of the poor and needy.–  Proverbs 31:8-9

In the past week, the current President Dr. Lazarus Chakwera and former President Dr. Bakili Muluzi participated in a few activities that causes me to pause and appreciate Malawi’s presidents.

Once in a while when they are not dissolving cabinet, flying around the world, delivering state of the art speeches written by a crafty speech-writer, or appointing a bucket-load of chairpersons, they come down their leadership ladder, become super-duper human and show the plebeians their humanity.

Listening to President Lazarus Chakwera’s cabinet swearing-in ceremony and his “I am the President…” speech, really had all the nuances of a return to the Kamuzu Banda days, as if the former Life President had resurrected from the dead. Of the new-look cabinet list, four prominent ousted persons are such persons as finance Minister Felix Mlusu, Roy Kachale Banda (former President Dr. Joyce Banda’s son), and others; but the biggest upset is the Vice President Dr. Saulos Chilima.

He is no longer a minister responsible for economic planning and development, he will be responsible for public sector reform.

The bickering and accusations continue to roll in from the four regions about central regionalism writ large. The counting that does not hold water, began. Such is the politics of Malawi. To quote Simon and Garfunkel: silence is golden.

In appreciating Malawi’s first leader, the Ngwazi, Life President of Malawi and Nkhoswe Number 1, he was my father’s chief mentor who advised him on his work as Malawi’s first envoy. In that role, whatever advice the first president had for my father, affected the first 20 years of my life.

Later as a co-ed at Chancellor College, the former president affected my schooling through his public lectures as the Chancellor.

I am strong-willed, resolute, and usually reach for the sky in all I do because that is what Kamuzu advised us to do. He usually added a caveat for female students to aspire to work as hard as male students.

This week former President Muluzi brought me to tears when he donated MK100,000 to former presidential photographer Dick Mlanzie. This is vintage Muluzi, the president who replied to every letter I ever wrote him. But it took me totally by surprise when the morning after my husband’s funeral, then-President Muluzi sent his aide de camp with a condolence envelope. From the first days in his presidency, Muluzi established himself as a president that will mourn or celebrate with you.

Of the many memorable presidential acts that are etched on Bingu wa Mutharika’s annals, is the fabulous 60th wedding anniversary party that the President and First Lady Callista Mutharika hosted for my mother and father at Sanjika Palace on August 10, 2010. At the event, four generations of 200+ from the Mutharika and Mbekeani family were treated to a ride down memory lane to August 12, 1950. Bingu told the crowd that he attended the ceremony and took the day’s event to encourage Malawians to emulate the example set by Mr. and Mrs. Mbekeani. This was an uplifting event.

Malawi’s first woman to rise to the post of President, Dr. Joyce Banda, is celebrated for the path she took to get to the Presidency. Her journey started as a personal assistant, operator of tailoring and bakery shops, forming the National Association of Business Women (NABW), winning the prestigious international Hunger Project Sustainable End to Hunger Award. From winning the Award, the NABW CEO established the Joyce Banda Foundation Secondary School, orphanages, and rural schools in Blantyre, Zomba, and other districts.

Joyce Banda run for and won a parliamentary seat and was appointed gender minister; she later scooped the foreign minister portfolio which led to Malawi signing diplomatic relations with China. She later was selected as Vice President in the 2009 Presidential elections and three years later became Malawi’s first female president, Africa’s second. It is an impressive journey. In her first year, President Joyce Banda met the Who’s Who on the international stage including Queen Elizabeth, US President Barak Obama (first black president), Aung San Suu Kyi of Myanmar, and others.

Former President Peter Mutharika is to be appreciated for being a president that reads the news. One day he surprised me when at a diaspora meeting in New York, he told me: “I like what you write, you write very well, although I do not always agree with what you write.” There was one thing that he agreed with me, this was that what happens to a president is the concern of the citizens of Malawi; they have a right to know and must be informed about anything that happens to the president. The president made these remarks after he fell ill while on a trip to the US. While the government kept quiet and some government officials threatened jail for any speculations on the President’s health, I wrote that no one has a right to keep what happens to the president from the people of Malawi.

The president apparently agreed with my Friday These Freedoms column because by Sunday he returned to Malawi and voiced a similar viewpoint: what happens to the president is to be communicated to the people, they have a right to know. Recalling these two items always warms my heart.

Current president Dr. Lazarus Chakwera, the man who argued with God (spoiler alert, Chakwera lost, God won), this week sailed into corridors of magnanimous history (again) when appointed the largest number of women in the cabinet seven out of 23 and five out of 9 deputy ministers. These are 1/3 for full ministers and ½ for deputies. The new cabinet comes with Nancy Tembo, ever in the news breathing her ministerial fire on errant constituents in her ministry, risen to the foreign affairs ministry (the ministry that was embarrassed recently when diplomats stuck their tongues at the government recall notices that threw government and its international civil servants into court). She will get things sorted.

Chakwera also gave other women a chance to prove their metal at leadership. This is courageous of President Chakwera. We appreciate you President Chakwera!

But more uplifting and a moment of celebration for Malawians was watching their President welcoming to Kamuzu Palace, the country’s music maestro, legendary Gides Chalamanda to commemorate the musician’s 90th birthday. The invite to Kamuzu Palace of Chalamanda is a heart-warming gesture and in Bingu style.

Presidents can be self-assertive, presumptuous, obstinate, and stubborn; that comes with the territory of leadership, but once in a while, these leaders, come down their leadership pole, become human again, mingling with the plebeians.

Oh God, save our leaders, each and everyone, we pray!

Malawi Parliament to debate suspected K61 billion ‘Cashgate’ by Former President Bingu Mutharika

Bingu WA Mutharika
Late Bingu Wa Mutharika; believed to have stashed billions in foreign banks

The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of Malawi Parliament  on Saturday disclosed its plan of taking the case involving the former President late Bingu wa Mutharika to the National Assembly in order to carry it as a motion.

PAC chairperson Alekeni Menyani who is also the Malawi Congress Party (MCP) law maker said this will make them to start their investigation on the matter. Continue reading Malawi Parliament to debate suspected K61 billion ‘Cashgate’ by Former President Bingu Mutharika

What T.B. Joshua ACTUALLY Said Concerning A Southern African President

Peter Mutharika
Mutharika; addressed as life president

POPULAR Nigerian prophet, Temitope Balogun Joshua, commonly referred to as T.B. Joshua, predicted trouble for a southern African president between February and April this year.

In a televised prophecy on January 3rd, 2016 to thousands of his congregants gathered at The Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN) in Lagos, Nigeria, T.B. Joshua said prayer sessions needed to be arranged for the region’s leaders because of ‘peculiar’ challenges ahead.

Continue reading What T.B. Joshua ACTUALLY Said Concerning A Southern African President

Dear Diary from President Peter Mutharika in the memory of my brother

Bingu WA Mutharika
Bingu WA Mutharika

Today, 9th May 2015, I led my fellow Malawians in the memory of my brother, my friend and former President late Ngwazi Professor Bingu wa Mutharika (May His Soul Continue To Rest In Peace) so that together we may acknowledge and share both our joy in the gift that his life was to us, and the pain that his passing brings.

Continue reading Dear Diary from President Peter Mutharika in the memory of my brother