Tag: Malawi

  • Malawi president strips deputy of powers over graft

    Malawi’s President Lazarus Chakwera has stripped his Vice-President Saulos Chilima of all his delegated powers after the latter was named in a $150m (£123m) corruption scandal involving government contracts.

    The vice-president has not yet responded to the allegations.

    A report by the country’s Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) named 53 current and former officials as having received money from British-Malawian businessman Zuneth Sattar between 2017 and 2021, the president said.

    This is in relation to 16 contracts that the Malawi Police Service and the Malawi Defence Force awarded to five companies belonging to Mr Sattar.

    The officials named in the report include the vice-president and the head of police – who has been sacked.

    But Malawi’s law does not allow the president to sack or suspend his vice-president as the latter is an elected official.

    “The best I can do for now, which is what I have decided to do, is to withhold from his office any delegated duties while waiting for the bureau to substantiate its allegations against him,” the president said in a national address on Tuesday.

    Mr Chakwera joined forces with Mr Chilima to defeat incumbent Peter Mutharika in 2020 presidential elections. The pair had promised to fight corruption in government.

    Source: BBC

  • ‘Malawians are your bosses, not your subjects’ – President warns appointees

    Lazarus Chakwera, president of Malawi has warned appointees against corruption during a partial swearing-in of ministers.

    Speaking over the weekend days after announcing a new government, Chakwera said he will not shield any appointee found guilty of corruption.

    “Corruption comes in many forms and there are many opportunities to succumb to it in this country. 

    “But you must resist it at every turn because if you do not follow the law, the law will follow you and if you think that I will use my office to save you from facing the law you have broken, then you are gravely mistaken”, he warned.

    He added: “you are here to serve, not to rule or boast. Occupying high office is not a licence to act high and mighty. The people of Malawi are your bosses, not your subjects.”

    The president last week sacked over dozen ministers when he announced a new government after dissolving the last cabinet over corruption concerns.

    A number of corruption related arrests have been made in the last few months with civil society groups mounting pressure for government to act decisively.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Malawi and the difficult task of delivering vaccines in Africa

    At the moment, Bwayira hospital in Lilongwe, Malawi’s capital is not suited to storing the COVID-19 vaccines which have been most successful in medical trials.

    Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines, which have declared success rates of 90 percent plus, need storing in deep freeze temperatures of minus 20 and minus 80 degrees Celcius respectively.

    Countries like Malawi face some daunting challenges.

    First, they have to compete for doses of vaccines with wealthy nations. Any vaccines they do acquire will need large stable storage facilities with reliable power supplies.

    Refrigerators like this keep supplies at two to eight degrees Celcius.

    Malawi already has a robust vaccine programme called Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI).

    But in a report in the science journal Nature, the Director of Africa CDC (Centres for Disease Control and Prevention) said most existing vaccine programmes are for children.

    Dr. Nonhlanhla Rosemary Dlamini is the World Health Organisation’s Malawi Representative.

    She says: “So normal vaccines that we are using in our EPI (expanded programm on immunisation) schedule right now are between 2 to 8 degrees centigrade but as you may have seen, the two vaccines that have now come up with the effectiveness of over 90 percent require ultra-cold chain, from minus 20 degrees centigrade to minus 80 degrees centigrade. The kind of equipment that many countries have including Malawi is not that ultra-cold chain kind of equipment. As we are doing our assessment we look at that, but however, we still do not know what kind of vaccine is going to come into the country.”

    Dlamini believes funding from the vaccine alliance GAVI has meant Malawi has been able to set up some cold chain facilities, but this would not be adequate to supply the vaccines needed.

    According to Africa CDC the continent needs to vaccinate 60 percent of its population to gain the minimum requirement of herd immunity.

    To achieve this Africa CDC says it will need about 1.5 billion doses of vaccine.

    The cost of the vaccine and of building systems and structures required for the delivery of it is estimated at between seven and ten billion American Dollars.

    The World Bank says Malawi is one of the poorest countries in the world.

    Dr. Charles Mwansambo is the Principal Secretary for Health in Malawi.

    He believes other vaccine candidates such as the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine might be more suited.

    “Though it is seventy percent effective, there might be a schedule that may improve that performance. So if we are to look at the last candidate I just talked about, as a country, we are ready because the EPI programme already has these storage facilities and Malawi is one of those countries on the continent that does well in its immunisation programes so we have the infrastructure in place already in all the regions. So we have warehouses that can keep this vaccine,” says Mwansambo.

    At the local hospital Fanny Banda and Ellenita Patrick wait to be seen.

    “The vaccine could have started in Malawi or better yet, it could have started in all the countries at the same time. This is because COVID-19 has affected every country. If they choose to start to start with a few countries, it means people in countries left to wait will have died at the time the vaccine reaches them,” says Banda.

    Patrick says: “Malawi does not have the capacity to handle the vaccine on its own. It would have been better if a nongovernmental organization gave a hand to make sure that every one gets the all-important vaccine.”

    Ellenita Patrick, another Lilongwe resident, believes Malawi needs lots of support to implement the vaccine.

    “Malawi does not have the capacity to handle the vaccine on its own. It could have been better if nongovernmental organization gave a hand making sure that everyone gets the all-important vaccine,” she says.

    According to Mwansambo, Malawi and other lower income nations will get access to vaccines around the middle of 2021 through COVAX set up by various organisations to ensure lower income countries get equitable access to vaccines.

    This initiative, however can’t stop wealthier countries from engaging in bilateral deals with the companies making these vaccinations.

    Mwansambo is hoping power supplies in the country will be reliable enough to support a large scale vaccination programme.

    “Any cold chain will need power so we also rely on our electricity supplier Escom (Electricity Supply Corporation of Malawi) to make sure that they make the power readily available. I must say that in the recent two months they have been very reliable as regards power distribution because that was the major challenge when we were introducing the other vaccines with all the blackouts but now the blackouts are a thing of the past,” he says.

    According to Mwansambo, Malawi’s government has set up a committee to decide who will be eligible to be in the first twenty percent of the population to receive a vaccine.

    Dlamini says the WHO has already issued guidance on this.

    She says: “WHO, our advice is that it should be front line health care workers and when I say health care workers I don’t just mean the nurses and doctors, I mean the sweepers who work in that area, the cleaners the physiotherapists everyone who is a front line worker at risk and then the MAITAG (Malawi Immunization Technical Advisory Group) will give us the list of who that should be. It’s the elderly, and then people with comorbidities and people with chronic illnesses, for instance, a person with diabetes, a person has high blood pressure, a person has TB (tuberculosis). Those are the people who are going to form that first 20 percent.”

    Source: africanews.com

  • Malawi and the difficult task of delivering vaccines in Africa

    At the moment, Bwayira hospital in Lilongwe, Malawi’s capital is not suited to storing the covid19 vaccines which have been most successful in medical trials.

    Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines, which have declared success rates of 90 percent plus, need storing in deep freeze temperatures of minus 20 and minus 80 degrees Celcius respectively.

    Countries like Malawi face some daunting challenges.

    First they have to compete for doses of vaccines with wealthy nations. Any vaccines they do acquire will need large stable storage facilities with reliable power supplies.

    Refrigerators like this keep supplies at two to eight degrees Celcius.

    Malawi already has a robust vaccine programme called Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI).

    But in a report in the science journal Nature the Director of Africa CDC (Centres for Disease Control and Prevention) said most existing vaccine programmes are for children.

    Dr. Nonhlanhla Rosemary Dlamini is the World Health Organisation’s Malawi Representative.

    She says: “So normal vaccines that we are using in our EPI (expanded programm on immunisation) schedule right now are between 2 to 8 degrees centigrade but as you may have seen, the two vaccines that have now come up with the effectiveness of over 90 percent require ultra-cold chain, from minus 20 degrees centigrade to minus 80 degrees centigrade. The kind of equipment that many countries have including Malawi is not that ultra-cold chain kind of equipment. As we are doing our assessment we look at that, but however, we still do not know what kind of vaccine is going to come into the country.”

    Dlamini believes funding from the vaccine alliance GAVI has meant Malawi has been able to set up some cold chain facilities, but this would not be adequate to supply the vaccines needed.

    According to Africa CDC the continent needs to vaccinate 60 percent of its population to gain the minimum requirement of herd immunity.

    To achieve this Africa CDC says it will need about 1.5 billion doses of vaccine.

    The cost of the vaccine and of building systems and structures required for the delivery of it is estimated at between seven and ten billion American Dollars.

    The World Bank says Malawi is one of the poorest countries in the world.

    Dr. Charles Mwansambo is the Principal Secretary for Health in Malawi.

    He believes other vaccine candidates such as the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine might be more suited.

    “Though it is seventy percent effective, there might be a schedule that may improve that performance. So if we are to look at the last candidate I just talked about, as a country, we are ready because the EPI programme already has these storage facilities and Malawi is one of those countries on the continent that does well in its immunisation programes so we have the infrastructure in place already in all the regions. So we have warehouses that can keep this vaccine,” says Mwansambo.

    At the local hospital Fanny Banda and Ellenita Patrick wait to be seen.

    “The vaccine could have started in Malawi or better yet, it could have started in all the countries at the same time. This is because COVID-19 has affected every country. If they choose to start to start with a few countries, it means people in countries left to wait will have died at the time the vaccine reaches them,” says Banda.

    Patrick says: “Malawi does not have the capacity to handle the vaccine on its own. It would have been better if a nongovernmental organization gave a hand to make sure that every one gets the all-important vaccine.”

    Ellenita Patrick, another Lilongwe resident, believes Malawi needs lots of support to implement the vaccine.

    “Malawi does not have the capacity to handle the vaccine on its own. It could have been better if nongovernmental organization gave a hand making sure that everyone gets the all-important vaccine,” she says.

    According to Mwansambo, Malawi and other lower income nations will get access to vaccines around the middle of 2021 through COVAX set up by various organisations to ensure lower income countries get equitable access to vaccines.

    This initiative, however can’t stop wealthier countries from engaging in bilateral deals with the companies making these vaccinations.

    Mwansambo is hoping power supplies in the country will be reliable enough to support a large scale vaccination programme.

    “Any cold chain will need power so we also rely on our electricity supplier Escom (Electricity Supply Corporation of Malawi) to make sure that they make the power readily available. I must say that in the recent two months they have been very reliable as regards power distribution because that was the major challenge when we were introducing the other vaccines with all the blackouts but now the blackouts are a thing of the past,” he says.

    According to Mwansambo, Malawi’s government has set up a committee to decide who will be eligible to be in the first twenty percent of the population to receive a vaccine.

    Dlamini says the WHO has already issued guidance on this.

    She says: “WHO, our advice is that it should be front line health care workers and when I say health care workers I don’t just mean the nurses and doctors, I mean the sweepers who work in that area, the cleaners the physiotherapists everyone who is a front line worker at risk and then the MAITAG (Malawi Immunization Technical Advisory Group) will give us the list of who that should be. It’s the elderly, and then people with comorbidities and people with chronic illnesses for instance, a person with diabetes, a person has high blood pressure, a person has TB (tuberculosis). Those are the people who are going to form that first 20 percent.”

    Source: africanews.com

  • Malawi headteacher’s office burnt over hijab row

    Religious tension is high in Malawi’s eastern district of Machinga after unknown arsonists torched the headteacher’s office in a Catholic school after he refused to allow Muslim students to attend class while wearing hijabs.

    The police have confirmed the incident at Mpiri primary school, saying the building was burnt to ashes.

    The population in the area is evenly divided between Christians and Muslims but most schools are owned by the Anglican and Catholic churches.

    The government policy does not prescribe a school dress code, but some Christian schools have always insisted that learners at their institutions should not wear hijabs, a decision that has led to several religious clashes.

    The Anglican and Catholic churches have threatened to close their schools in the area in the wake of the recent attacks.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Malawi president backtracks on one million jobs promise

    Malawi’s President Lazarus Chakwera has backtracked on his campaign promise to create one million jobs, saying the government can only employ 200,000 people.

    President Chakwera said the government could not create jobs on its own and needed the private sector’s help.

    He said every entrepreneur needed to employ more people.

    The president spoke during his 100 days scorecard event on Monday.

    The one million campaign promise was a major talking point for the Tonse Alliance that was elected in a repeat presidential poll.

    Critics have told local media that the alliance had no job creation plan and was just using it as a campaign strategy.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Malawi leader marks 100 days in office

    An event presenting an audit of the first 100 days in office of Malawi’s President Lazarus Chakwera is under way in the capital, Lilongwe.

    The secretary to the cabinet, Zangazanga Chikhosi, has outlined the initiatives approved by the cabinet to ease the cost of production for farmers.

    Vice-President Saulos Chilima said the new administration is in the process of reforming public service to ensure improved service delivery.

    President Chakwera is expected to address the nation during the event and highlight the policies his administration will undertake.

    He vowed to unite the country and fight poverty during his inauguration in June

    Source: bbc.com

  • Malawi MPs reject condom donation

    Lawmakers in Malawi have rejected a donation of more than 200,000 condoms from the Aids Health Foundation.

    They were to be placed in toilets within parliament buildings.

    The leader of the majority, Richard Chimwendo, said members of parliament did not need such a donation as they can afford condoms.

    The donation was given to the chairperson of the wellness committee, Maggie Chinsinga.

    Mr Chimwendo said a report published by a local newspaper on the donation had injured the reputation of MPs.

    The report had quoted Ms Chinsinga as saying that parliament dispenses about 10,000 condoms every month and sometimes “runs out of stock,” Malawi’s Nation newspaper wrote.The Deputy Speaker, Madaliotso Kazombo, said that was not true and demanded an apology.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Malawi activists want MPs to use their vernacular

    A civil society group in Malawi wants MPs to be allowed to debate in their vernacular in parliament.

    The Centre for Democracy and Economic Development Initiatives (CDEDI) says the legislators would better express themselves in vernacular than in English.

    The centre director Sylvester Namiwa said the people would also understand the debates better if they were in their language.

    “We have noted with concern on how some MPs are struggling to express themselves in English, and yet the same people were trusted by their constituents to represent them in the national assembly,” Mr Namiwa was quoted as saying by Malawi 24 website.

    The Malawi constitution requires one to be able to speak fluent English to qualify to run for MP.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Malawi president urges prayer and fasting

    Malawi President Lazarus Chakwera has called on citizens to join him in fasting and prayer against the spread and impact of coronavirus in the country.

    The president urged “all religiously inclined citizens and residents of Malawi” to fast and pray for three days starting Thursday.

    He has also declared Sunday a national day of thanksgiving.

    “The president asks that prayers be lifted up for the recovery of those infected and affected by the virus; the protection and sustenance of healthcare workers on the front-lines of the fight, the protection and diligence of those who have not yet contracted the virus, the effectiveness of the presidential task force on Covid-19,” a statement signed by Information Minister Gospel Kazako said.

    The president is a former church pastor, who led the Malawi Assemblies of God church for 24 years.

    He became leader of then opposition Malawi Congress Party in 2013 without having any previous political experience, and was elected president in the 23 June election rerun, beating incumbent Peter Mutharika.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Malawi opposition leader Lazarus Chakwera wins historic poll rerun

    Malawi’s opposition leader Lazarus Chakwera has won the country’s rerun presidential vote, officials say.

    He defeated incumbent Peter Mutharika with 58.57% of the vote in Tuesday’s poll, the electoral commission announced late on Saturday.

    In February, Malawi’s constitutional court annulled Mr. Mutharika’s victory in the May 2019 election, citing vote tampering.

    The country was bitterly divided in the run-up to this week’s election.

    It is the second African nation to annul a presidential election over irregularities, after Kenya in 2017.

    Following the official result on Saturday, Mr. Chakwera said his victory was “a win for democracy and justice,” adding: “My heart is bubbling with joy.”

    His supporters took to the streets of the Malawian capital, Lilongwe, sounding car horns and letting off fireworks.

    Mr. Chakwera is expected to be sworn in on Sunday.

    Source: BBC

  • Malawi police record 38 violent electoral incidents

    Deputy Commissioner of Police Noel Kayira has said law enforcement agencies have so far recorded 38 violent incidents in relation to Tuesday’s election and that they have also pressed charges to rapper Fredokiss, who was arrested on Tuesday.

    He said Fredokiss, the real name Fred Penjani Kalua who is son to Cabinet minister Kamlepo Kalua, has been charged with the offence of offering handouts during elections time contrary to Presidential and Parliamentary Elections Act (PPEA).

    The charge is against Section 115 of the PPEA and Section 41 of the Political Parties Act. The two acts prohibit people from offering an inducement to people during voting.

    According to Kayira, the maximum penalty for contravening the law is a charge of K500 000 and a two-year custodial sentence while the Political Parties Act attracts a fine of K10 million and a five-year custodial sentence.

    But Kayira said after all investigations have been concluded, a consolidated charge will be brought before the rapper.

    Kayira alsi said 38 incidents were jointly registered by the police and Malawi Defence Force and that 46 individuals are in police custody.

    He said the suspects were arrested prior to the polling day, on the day of voting and in the past two days after voting was concluded.

    Kayira said the offences included intimidation of monitors, torching of a vehicle, being found with other voters’ particulars to vote for them, unlawful detention and dishing out handouts on voting day.

    On his part, Malawi Defence Force director of military operations Brigadier General Blaise Saenda confirmed incidents where ex-military officers were arrested in Nkhotakota and Salima but said the security organ was still probing the matter.

    Meanwhile, Phalombe Magistrate’s Court is Friday expected to hear witness testimonies in a case in which nine people are accused of causing violence during the fresh presidential election on June 23 in the district.

    The suspects appeared in court on Wednesday where they all pleaded not guilty to the charge of conducting themselves in a manner likely to cause a breach of peace in a public place.

    It is reported that the suspects on polling day at Nazombe Primary School Polling Centre in Phalombe East Constituency, threatened voters to choose a particular candidate.

    Phalombe Police Station prosecutor Davie Muloza told the court that the State will parade witnesses to testify against the accused.

    “Our investigations are still in progress and we will amend the charges relating to electoral laws. We appeared in court to tell the accused why we are keeping them in custody as the Constitution states,” he said.

    Phalombe first grade magistrate Damson Banda adjourned the case to Friday.

    All the suspects come from Traditional Authority Nazombe in the district.

    On Tuesday, Malawians went to the polls to elect president following the nullification of the May 21, 2019, presidential election on February 3 this year by the High Court sitting as the Constitutional Court.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Malawi presidential election: State broadcaster says opposition leading

    Malawi’s opposition is claiming victory in the re-run of last year’s presidential election – which was held again after allegations of widespread rigging.

    Official results for Tuesday’s poll have not yet been declared by Malawi’s electoral commission.

    But state broadcaster MBC says opposition leader Lazarus Chakwera is leading with 59% of the vote.

    President Peter Mutharika, who wants a second term, has 38%, it says.

    A third candidate who was not regarded as a serious contender, Peter Kuwani, is said to have received less than 2% of votes.

    Last year Malawi became the second African nation to annul a presidential election over irregularities, after Kenya in 2017.

    The BBC’s southern Africa Correspondent Andrew Harding says it was a rare – and for many an encouraging – judicial intervention on a continent where flawed, even stolen, elections are seldom overturned.

    Mr Chakwera’s supporters are already celebrating what they believe is a historic victory – in what would be the first time in sub-Saharan Africa that a flawed election result has been overturned, and the opposition has gone on to win power democratically.

    Praise has also come from fellow southern African opposition figures.

    “New life to Malawi!,” said Zimbabwean opposition MDC leader Nelson Chamisa. “The Lord has given Malawi a Godly man,” he added referring to Mr Chakwera’s past in the clergy.

    “My friend, brother and leader has just won the Malawian elections. I just got off the phone with him and celebrate his achievement,” tweeted the former leader of South Africa’s DA opposition party Mmusi Maimane.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Malawi leader refuses to concede defeat

    Although the Malawi Electoral Commission (MEC) is yet to declare the final result from the re-run of the presidential election, early indications show that the incumbent Peter Mutharika is trailing behind his main rival Lazarus Chakwera.

    Mr Mutharika says there’s no winner or loser, and has refused to concede defeat.

    According to his running mate, Atupele Muluzi, who said he had been sent by Mutharika to address the media, the president is appealing to all his supporters to disregard reports that say he has lost the elections, saying they must wait for the MEC’s official announcement.

    Atupele Muluzi is son of former President Bakili Muluzi and leader of a small opposition party, the United Democratic Front (UDF) which was in an electoral alliance with Mr Mutharika’s governing Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).

    The young Muluzi claimed that up to 15 monitors deployed by the DPP /UDF to opposition strongholds are currently missing and feared dead after being attacked by opposition loyalists.

    Results from all 28 districts, signed off by officials and party representatives at district level show that President Mutharika is lagging behind Lazarus Chakwera – who leads the main opposition Malawi Congress Party and represents the Tonse Alliance made up of nine opposition parties.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Vote counting under way in Malawi’s re-run election

    Votes are being counted in Malawi following a re-run of last year’s election on Tuesday.

    Polling was largely peaceful, although President Peter Mutharika accused the opposition of acts of violence in its strongholds in the centre of the country.

    His narrow victory in 2019’s poll was annulled in February after judges ruled that there had been evidence of vote tampering.

    The incumbent is facing a strong challenge from an opposition coalition led by Lazarus Chakwera.

    The results may not be declared for several days.

    Disclaimer : “Opinions expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author(s) and do not in any way reflect those of tigpost.co. Our outfit will hereby not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Frog jumps and happy voters in Malawi

    Polls have now closed in Malawi’s historic re-run presidential election.

    There were long queues in some places reflecting an enthusiasm for the election, journalist Peter Jegwa reports from the capital, Lilongwe.

    Another journalist spotted one man who was so happy that he frog-jumped to the ballot box and then prayed before he cast his vote, he then hopped away:

    Source: bbc.com

     

  • Malawi voters disregard social distancing

    Malawi’s local media has been sharing photos of voters queuing at polling stations without observing social distancing.

    The electoral commission had urged voters to maintain a distance of two metres between each other.

    Commission chairperson Chifundo Kachale had said polling stations would have water points where voters can wash their hands to avoid contracting coronavirus.

    Malawi’s Times Media tweeted that some polling stations did not have the water points:

    Source: bbc.com

  • Malawi courts stop forced retirement of chief justice

    The courts in Malawi have issued two separate orders stopping the government from sending the country’s Chief Justice Andrew Nyirenda on leave pending retirement.

    By law, judges in Malawi have to retire when they reach 65, but Mr Nyirenda will only turn 65 at the end of next year.

    The government said that seeing as he had accumulated so many leave days – more than he had time left to serve – he should step down now.

    But the courts have tried to put a stop to this.

    Malawi’s courts and the presidency have been on a collision course since judges nullified President Peter Mutharika’s re-election last year and ordered fresh presidential elections, which will now be held on 23 June.

    Mr Mutharika is facing a stiff challenge from opposition leader Lazarus Chakwera who is heading a coalition of nine opposition political parties.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Malawi’s elections chief resigns ahead of re-run

    The head of Malawi’s electoral commission has resigned a month before a presidential election re-run.

    The vote was ordered by the Constitutional Court which overturned last year’s poll giving a second term to President Peter Mutharika.

    Protesters had demanded that Jane Ansah stand down over irregularities in the original election, including the use of correction fluid on ballot papers.

    But in an interview on state television she denied she was giving in to pressure.

    The re-run will take place on 23 June.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Malawi gives cash to virus-hit households

    Malawi’s President Peter Mutharika has announced an emergency cash transfer for the people worst affected by COVID-19.

    Eligible households will receive a monthly payment of 35,000 Malawian Kwacha ($47; £38) starting in May.

    The announcement came after the High Court in Malawi extended an order preventing the government from implementing a three-week total lockdown.

    Human rights groups had complained there was no safety net for the poorest people whose livelihoods would be affected.

    Malawi has recorded 36 cases of coronavirus, including three deaths.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus lockdown halted in Malawi

    Plans for a lockdown in Malawi have been scuppered at the last minute, after a court injuction ordered it be delayed by at least seven days, lawyers say.

    It was due to begin on Saturday.

    The news will come as a relief to traders who have fiercely opposed a lockdown because of the serious threat they say it poses to their livelihoods.

    The court challenge was brought against the government by the Human Rights Defenders Coalition, whose lawyer has told the BBC that both sides will present their cases at the High Court next Friday.

    Until then the lockdown is on hold.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Malawi legalises growing of cannabis

    Malawi has become the latest southern African country to legalise the growing, selling and exporting of cannabis.

    Recreational smokers consider, “Malawi Gold”, as they call it, to be one of the finest forms of the drug.

    But the authorities have stopped short of legalising it for personal use.

    It will be used to make medicines and hemp fibres, which are used to make clothes, biofuel, paper and other products.

    Cannabis sales could supplement the tobacco trade, upon which Malawi is highly dependent.

    Other southern African countries, including Zambia, Lesotho and Zimbabwe, have relaxed rules on growing the plant.

    But South Africa is the only one to decriminalise it for personal use.

  • Women make a living picking through scrap metal

    Between Germiston and Benoni is an open metal dump where more than 20 women survive by collecting scrap metal. Daily they pick through heaps of metal waste dumped by companies on the East Rand, looking for copper, stainless steel, zinc and brass.

    There are no ablution facilities and the women have to use the bush to change into working clothes, to freshen up after the day’s scrap collecting, or to relieve themselves.

    For hours they sit at different spots on top of heaps of scrap. With their bare hands they dig through the scrap to gather whatever they can sell for cash at the nearest scrapyard. Some sit in groups of three or four, chatting while they work. Others prefer to sit alone.

    A typical day begins as early as 6:30am.

    Aida Mainda says, “Passersby often stare at our greasy clothes and faces when we work … But when I put on my makeup to go and shop in town, no one can even tell that I’ve earned the money fishing through a dirty scrap heap.”

    Mayamiko Gonan, from Malawi but now living in Boksburg, scrutinises each item of scrap, then sorts it into 20-litre plastic containers.

    “It’s amazing what valuable pieces one can find in this heap. Maybe one day l will even find gold,” she laughs.

    “Gone are the days when I used to worry about breaking my nails or my hands becoming rough. What’s the use when what matters is making money?” she says.

    Gonan did domestic work but couldn’t make ends meet. A friend showed her the dump six months ago and she has been going there since. On a good day she can make R150.

    Lina-Marie Shongo, from Mozambique and now staying in an informal settlement in Benoni, has been collecting scrap since September last year. She used to have a fruit and vegetable stand.

    “Collecting scrap has changed my life. As a fruit and veg vendor l never used to make much. But now I have gained respect from my family because l am able to put food on the table,” she says. “Here copper is like gold. Filling two or three buckets makes my day.”

    At first she could not tell the difference between metals, but the other women taught her.

    Joyce Morau is South African. She started as a scrap collector, picking through the dump site, but now she buys the load of scrap metal from trucks brought to the dump by firms she knows, and she employs nine women to sort through it for her.

    “People made fun of me when l started off as a scrap picker. They said I should look for something better to do, but now I am a business owner employing other people,” says the single mother of five.

    Morau pays her employees R80 to R100 a day and sells the scrap to big yards in Benoni.

    “Sometimes the dump runs dry and we wait for trucks to come with material. If more metal companies come and dump here it can make our lives easier. The government should support our project by providing us with toilets and fencing our area so that women working here can feel safe,” she says.

    Women working for Joyce Morau sort through a truck load of scrap metal which she has bought.

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    Source: allafrica.com

  • Protesters padlock offices of Malawi election body

    Protesters in Malawi have padlocked the offices of the electoral commission in an effort to force its head to quit after the Constitutional Court annulled last year’s presidential election.

    Hundreds of demonstrators marched 5km (3.1 miles) to the commission’s offices in the commercial capital, Blantyre, and locked its entrance gates with large, rusty chains.

    Thousands of people did the same in the capital, Lilongwe, handing over the padlock’s key to an army officer.

    The court found serious irregularities in the poll, including the use of correction fluid on tally sheets.

    The head of the electoral commission insists there was no wrongdoing.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Terrible toll of Malawi electricity outages back

    Power black outs are now back in the country as the nation is pushed into darkness for prolonged hours, just a week after the state power distribution company put up press releases celebrating 40 days of no power cuts.

    Health workers using mobile phone light during blackout

    Publicist for Electricity Generation Company (Egenco), the country’s main producer of power, Moses Gwaza attributed the current spate of power black outs to break down of the company’s machines.

    “Three out of the four machines at Kapichira power station were down. these are obsolete machines which are support to go for overhauling maintenance every 20 years,” he said.

    Gwaza said the machines have not undergone the serious maintenance since they were installed in the 1960s.

    Electricity Supply Corporation of Malawi (Escom) h spokesperson Innocent Chitosi said the company was working with Egenco to minimise the power black outs.

    Source: ghanaweb.com

  • Malawi president to contest cancelled election win in court

    Malawi’s president is planning to contest a court decision overturning his election in May last year.

    A spokesman for Peter Mutharika said he would lodge an appeal with the Constitutional Court.

    On Monday judges annulled the vote, citing widespread irregularities. They ordered a new election within 150 days.

    Malawi’s governing Democratic Progressive Party has urged its supporters to remain peaceful.

    The opposition leader, Lazarus Chakwera, told thousands of celebrating supporters that the verdict was a victory for democracy.

    He came a close second to Mr Mutharika, and went to court alleging fraud.

    Source: bbc

  • Malawi court cancels Peter Mutharika election, orders new vote

    Malawi’s constitutional court on Monday ordered a new presidential election after annulling the results of a vote that re-elected President Peter Mutharika in May, citing widespread polling irregularities, including the use of correction fluid on ballot papers.

    The verdict, which is expected to stoke turmoil in the traditionally peaceful southern African country, can be appealed by Mutharika, who will remain president until the fresh polls.

    “We hold that the first respondent (Mutharika) was not duly elected as president of Malawi on May 21, 2019,” ruled lead judge Healey Potani.

    “We hereby nullify the results of the presidential elections and we order for a fresh election,” he said.

    A new election should be organised within 150 days, the court said. In the meantime the status in the presidency, including the office of the vice president, revert to what it was prior to last year’s presidential election.

    Sporadic protests have broken out across the country since Mutharika was declared the winner of the May vote by a narrow margin with 38.5 percent of the vote.

    Runner-up Lazarus Chakwera, who lost by just 159,000 votes, alleges he was robbed of victory and went to court.

    UNJUSTIFIABLE

    The case gripped the nation and kept Malawians glued to radio stations for hours on end, listening to live broadcast of witnesses presenting evidence of the alleged vote rigging during a six-month-long hearing.

    On Monday security was tightened with a heavy military presence around the court and businesses pulled down their shutters for the week, fearing violence erupting after the ruling was announced.

    Judges were driven to court in a military armoured vehicle.

    An army helicopter occasionally hovered above the courthouse and the central business district as the 500-page verdict was read out.

    “It is clear that the use of Tippex (correction fluid) was employed by (electoral commission) officers to hide votes,” said judge Ivy Kamanga, taking a turn reading the judgement that took more than nine hours to deliver.

    “Use of Tippex was unjustifiable and an irregularity,” she said, adding the way in which the electoral commission “dealt with the alterations was not in line with the law, hence it was irregular”.

    The court also said that only a quarter of the results sheets were verified and it “finds this to be a serious malpractice that undermined the elections”.

    ‘PIVOTAL MOMENT’

    It is the first time a presidential election has been challenged on legal grounds in Malawi since independence from Britain in 1964.

    The outcome echoes a historic decision by Kenya’s judiciary to annul presidential election results over claims of widespread irregularities in 2017.

    “Credible, free and fair elections form a solid foundation for democracy,” Potani said in a preamble to the judgement.

    Protesters took to the streets over several months last year demanding the resignation of the electoral commission chief, and many demonstrations turned violent.

    Anger flared last month after Chief Justice Andrew Nyirenda claimed bribes had been offered to the five judges presiding over the case.

    Malawi’s anti-graft body vowed to probe the allegations and arrested top banker Thom Mpinganjira last week.

    The opposition has urged supporters to maintain peace and accept the court’s decision.

    Mutharika, 79, has repeatedly dismissed opposition accusations that election was rigged and brushed off doubts about the official results.

    In a joint statement, British, American and several European ambassadors referred Thursday to the verdict as a “pivotal moment” in Malawi’s history.

    Source: theeastafrican.co.ke

  • Policeman ‘stoned to death’ in Malawi

    Police in Malawi have named an officer killed on Tuesday during clashes with anti-government protesters in Msundwe – a trading outpost west of the capital city, Lilongwe.

    Police spokesman James Kadadzerab told news agency AFP that officer Usumani Imedi had been stoned to death and “killed by rioters and criminals”.

    He was among officers who confronted demonstrators who had blocked the main road in Msundwe, an opposition stronghold, to stop supporters of President Peter Mutharika’s from attending his first rally in the city since his controversial election win in May.

    Read:Post-election protests break out in Malawi

    Opposition supporters have been angered by how the electoral commission handled the vote, alleging it was full of irregularities.

    Homeland Security Minister Nicholas Dausi said that other road users had asked for the police to intervene after the protesters blocked the busy road.

    “When the police arrived, they started stoning them to the extent that we have lost one police officer”.

    Read:Cases of suicide on the increase in Malawi

    Police fired teargas to disperse the demonstrators but they “kept regrouping and they fought back with stones… in the ensuing chaos, they cornered one policeman whom they stoned to death,” an eyewitness told AFP.

    At least 12 people have been arrested and many more are likely to be detained, local Nation newspaper reports.

    President Mutharika later held the rally in the capital and appealed for calm in the country, saying:

    “This is our country. Let’s not burn it down.”

    Source: bbc.com