Tag Archives: Central Poultry

Central poultry empowers 150 Lilongwe farmers with chickens, vaccines, technical support

BLANTYRE-(MaraviPost)-Over 150 poultry farmers from Area 23, Area 18, Njewa, and Chitedze in Lilongwe are set to benefit from a groundbreaking initiative by Central Poultry (CP).

The first wave of beneficiaries will receive chicks, vaccines, feed, and technical support from CP, aimed at turning their ambitions into thriving businesses.

According to CP Head of Marketing, Mike Makawa, the initiative is designed to empower local farmers who dream of growing chicken but lack the necessary inputs and expert guidance to flourish.

“We want to make these farmers resilient in this sophisticated farming and help the country meet the growing demand for poultry, which we have consistently struggled to satisfy,” Makawa said.

Once the chickens are grown, farmers will have the freedom to sell them back to CP for slaughtering and packaging, or take them to market themselves and repay the input costs.

One of the beneficiaries, Josephine Kambanizithe from Area 23, hailed the technical support, saying she had struggled to raise chickens profitably for years.

“Keeping these chickens is not easy; they need a lot of care, but with this help, I can see my first million,” she said, expressing her optimism about the initiative.

This support from CP is expected to make a significant difference in the lives of these local farmers, helping them build sustainable businesses and contribute to Malawi’s poultry industry.

CDEDI demands for fact validation exercise on Central Poultry premises

By Iommie Chiwalo

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-The zigzag approach coupled with seemingly treatment with kid’s groves by the Lilongwe City authorities on matters concerning hygienic conditions of Central Poultry (CP) has compelled Centre for Democracy and Economic Development Initiatives (CDEDI) to call for fact validation exercise.

The calls by CDEDI comes following the company’s resumption of business operations, after the purported closure by the city authorities as a preventive measure to contain further spread of the Cholera outbreak.

As cholera is still on the rise, CDEDI embarked on an independent investigations which established that CP refused to sign the letter to formalize the closure and that the decision to turn the place into a compost centre instead of just dumping waste raises a lot of questions than answers.

According to CDEDI Executive Director Sylvester Namiwa, in the said letter the Lilongwe City Council (LCC) Deputy Director of Health Jorlex Kantokoma said the closure was necessary because Chicken waste attracts a lot of flies making the place a fertile ground for the spread of cholera and that CP was asked to destroy the structures.

LCC Mayor Banda 3rd right checking the dumping site at Central Poultry

A communication from Lilongwe City Council, CP was ordered to stop using the centre as a compost-making site with immediate effect until when proper procedures are followed [i.e. to prepare a project brief and submit the same to the Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources or Environmental Affairs Department for approval before establishing the compost making centre or waste station] and that when the approval is granted, the company was expected to come up with standard designs for waste transfer stations in line with Lilongwe City Council guidelines and standards.

However it has been discovered that CP never performed as expected by not submitting a project brief to the council.

On the prevailing events, CDEDI feels that consumers and indeed the general public are of the view that both CP and the city authorities owe Malawians an explanation.

“As a mouthpiece of the voiceless, CDEDI has, on behalf of millions of the consumers of your products, developed interest and embarked on a fact validation exercise, hence our interest to physically visit the CP premises for inspection in order to validate the information that is already in our possession,” Namiwa says.

Namiwa has since requested for Thursday, 26th January, 2023, from 10:00hrs as an ample time for fact validation exercise.

“CDEDI would also like to seize the opportunity during the said visit to discuss the long outstanding complaints to the company by the city residents of Area 1(Falls), Area 36, and those along the M1 road, who happen to continuously and painfully endure the pungent smell from your open waste disposal vehicles that literally pollute the air every time they carry refuse to the Area 38 dumping site in Lilongwe,” he said.

He has also requested the city authorities to allow Mr. Katokoma to join in the physical inspection of CP premises on the said date in order to appreciate the changes made to the site and the accompanying correspondence backing the decision to resume operations.

The company was shut down by the Lilongwe City Mayor Richard Banda, for operating a dump site used for compost without following proper procedures.

The closure took place following an exercise dubbed ‘sanitation inspection tour’ which also led to the closure of Waka-Waka market on Tuesday, 3rd January 2023.

It was in the press that the Mayor took this route because Lilongwe was and still is one of the hardest hit cities by the Cholera outbreak, and Area 36 where both CP and Waka-Waka are located, is also the hardest hit suburb.

Nonetheless, the news about the sudden ‘opening’ of the company has raised eyebrows and left tongues wagging considering the twists and turns.

“The majority of Malawians are of the view that some corners were cut in the process, given the supersonic speed at which major decisions were taken,”

Lilongwe City Council closes wakawaka market, central poultry over poor sanitation

Wakawaka market closed

BLANTYRE-(MaraviPost)-Following ongoing rise in the number of cholera cases in the country, Lilongwe city council authorities have today temporarily closed Wakawaka market and Central Poultry 2000 Limited for failing to follow sanitation measures.

Mayor for Lilongwe city council Richard Banda has confirmed the development with local media saying the action is to prevent people’s lives at risk of contracting cholera disease.

The Mayor inspected himself the market and the company where he noted poor sanitation.

According to Banda, the closure will become effective Wednesday, January 3, 2023.

Banda said the facilities will be reopened once they comply with proper hygiene measures.

Lilongwe has so far, recorded 1,265 cholera cases and 106 deaths since the start of the outbreak in March.

Largely, Malawi has registered 18,222 cases and 620 deaths over the same period.

On Monday, January 2, alone, the country recorded 409 cases and 25 deaths.

In a similar development, government has suspended reopening of primary and secondary schools across the country for two weeks due to the cholera outbreak.

Cholera is a bacterial disease usually spread through contaminated water.

The disease causes severe diarrhea and dehydration.

If left untreated, cholera can be fatal within hours, even in previously healthy people.