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Mangochi DHSS stresses on prevention as Covid-19 cases soar

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Written by  Kondwani Magombo

Director for Health and Social Services for Mangochi District Council, Dr. Henry Chibowa, has urged people in the district to observe Covid-19 preventive measures as the pandemic keeps spreading in the district.

The district’s daily update on Covid-19 posted by Chibowa on the district’s forum on Thursday indicated that the district had cumulatively recorded 80 cases of the pandemic with 57 active cases and 23 recoveries.

According to the pandemic’s distribution map posted on the update, Mangochi Boma and Traditional Authorities Chimwala, Mponda, Jalasi and Katuli are currently more affected than other areas in the district.

The Thursday update indicated that 54 of the cumulative cases in the district are imported while 24 cases are local transmission, prompting the DHSS to call on the people in the district to “keep the vigilance and stay home”. 

Chibowa wrote on the district’s Covid-19 Response Team forum and copied to other fora: “With the local transmission rate now higher, it means Covid-19 is now close to all our offices, if not already there,”

He also stressed the need to observe hand washing at all entry points, proper use of masks, and social distancing.

Meanwhile, the district health office has conducted 178 Covid-19 tests with cumulative 429 follow-ups and 229 discharges while, according to the update, cases currently on follow up were 175 as of Thursday.


On Tuesday the district’s Chief Preventive Health Officer, Dr. Kondwani Mamba, said the fight against Covid-19 in the district was facing a number of challenges such as laxity among the people and hiding of new arrivals.

Mamba said another challenge was that most people suspected of Covid-19 and tested once were not coming back for another test to ascertain their status.

“This one-time test is affecting the accuracy of our statistics but we are now involving community structures to help in the matter,” said Mamba.

Mangochi is one of the districts with the highest population living in, or traveling to and from South Africa in the countr

Yamikani Chester set to light up Las Vegas

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By Williams Gondwa

Malawi national football team attacker Yamikani Chester has said he is motivated to deliver for his United States League (USL) Championship side, Las Vegas Lights FC.

USL Championship returns to action on July 25 after the season was suspended in March due to Covid-19 pandemic. The 35-team league had just played its season openers when play was stopped.

Chester’s debut at Lights is set for July 25 when facing San Diego Loyal SC before entertaining Reno 1868 FC on August 1.

Yamikani Chester

Chester, speaking in a telephone interview Friday, said having trained for three months he was looking forward to his Lights debut after joining the club from North Carolina during the transfer window.

“I am delighted to hear that the season will start this month. I have been waiting for this moment. I wasn’t disappointed with the break due to Covid-19 because I knew that time will come and I will play.

My task is to help the club to win matches,” the former Be Forward Wanderers and Mighty Tigers winger said.

Chester is optimistic that he would settle down quickly as the side has a new coach.

“I was also happy to learn that we have a new coach here. This will work to my advantage because the coach doesn’t know us. I am sure that he will pick players on merit,” he said.

Commenting on how he is looking forward to his debut at Lights, Chester said since the moment he joined the club he has always been ready to play.

“The most important thing is to be given game time here. I am always ready to help my club, so once given a chance on July 25 I will do the needful,” Chester said.

Chester joined Czech Republic side MFK Vsykov in 2019 before he was loaned out to North Carolina where he scored five goals.

Original source: Times Malawi

Mtambo to serve as Minister, dispels rumours he has turned down offer

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Commander in chief of Citizen for transformation movement Timothy Mtambo has said he is happy and ready to serve in the government. He said this after rumours started circulating on social media that he has turned down the offer. Mtambo was picked to be in the newly unveiled cabinet by President Lazarus Chakwera to be Minister of Civic Education and National Unity.

Speaking to 247Malawi News of Thursday morning Mtambo said he is looking forward to serve Malawians in his new role “For the sake of nation good I am accepting this role. This role will give a better platform to continue the struggle that I have fought for many years, issues of human rights, freedom and national unity are very important for Malawi at this time”

Timothy Mtambo

President Chakwera announced his 31 member cabinet yesterday. Mtambo also took time to thank Malawians for their support and believes Tonse government will be a listening government.

“We have talked about servant leadership and this is what we will deliver, I would like to thank President Chakwera for putting faith in me and including me in his cabinet. This position is not mine only, it is for all Malawians and I am ready to serve” added Mtambo 

Mtambo a human rights activist turned politician was at the forefront of demonstrations that called for removal of former Malawi electoral commission chairperson Jane Ansah. He then, formed a political movement back in April called Citizens for transformation Movement (CFT). It was the platform of this movement that he travelled all over the country campaigning after he endorsed the candidacy of President Chakwera and Dr Chilima.

At the age of 36 Mtambo is the youngest member of the cabinet

World Bank Approves $157 Million to Protect Malawi’s Watersheds and Improve Rural Livelihoods

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The World Bank Board of Executive Directors approved on June 19, 2020, a total of $157 million for the Malawi Watershed Services Improvement Project (MWASIP), composed of a $78.5 million credit and $78.5 million grant from the International Development Association (IDA)*

Malawi’s water resources are under threat from severe land degradation and loss of forest cover. Critical watersheds are becoming degraded, leading to reduced water availability, deteriorating water quality, increased vulnerability to droughts and floods, reduced energy security, and reduced agricultural productivity. The project will therefore help to increase the adoption of sustainable landscape management practices in priority watersheds and improve watershed services and rural livelihoods. The project is the first in a series of operations aimed at supporting the implementation of the National Forest Landscape Restoration Strategy.

 Greg Toulmin, World Bank Country Manager for Malawi.

“Nearly 8 million hectares, which is 80 percent of the total land area of Malawi, is degraded and requires restoration. Soil erosion and nutrient depletion are the most severe forms of land degradation that affect more than 60 percent of the entire land area. We have committed in our strategy to restore 4.5 million hectares of degraded land by 2030, and this project is the first opportunity we must invest at scale in reversing landscape degradation and protecting our most important watersheds,” says Dr. Henrie Njoloma, Secretary for Irrigation and Water Development.

Within the first three years, the project will provide $40 million in livelihood support to over a quarter million beneficiaries through various community grant schemes designed to encourage better land stewardship. In additional to the grants, the project makes available $45 million worth of water infrastructure, including 10 small multipurpose dams, 20 rainwater harvesting structures and 10 small-scale irrigation schemes to increase access to water for productive use. The infrastructure will create over 2,500 construction jobs and give people the chance to work and earn.

“Land degradation in Malawi is a major challenge, arising from environmental, climatic and other pressures. Previous projects, supported by the World Bank and other partners, have demonstrated that it is possible to restore degraded landscapes through an integrated package of interventions involving land and water management,” says Greg Toulmin, World Bank Country Manager for Malawi. “So, we see a long-term partnership between the World Bank and the Government of Malawi as crucial to these efforts at improving livelihoods and building rural resilience, especially in the context of Malawi’s recovery from the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The project will enhance the capacity of watershed management institutions at all levels to sustain interventions beyond the project and builds on the success of another World Bank-supported project, the Shire River Basin Management Project, which the Government of Malawi implemented from 2012 to 2019.

  • The World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA), established in 1960, helps the world’s poorest countries by providing grants and low to zero-interest loans for projects and programs that boost economic growth, reduce poverty, and improve poor people’s lives. IDA is one of the largest sources of assistance for the world’s 76 poorest countries, 39 of which are in Africa. Resources from IDA bring positive change to the 1.6 billion people who live in IDA countries. Since 1960, IDA has supported development work in 113 countries. Annual commitments have averaged about $21 billion over the last three years, with about 61 percent going to Africa

Chakwera good salesman serving stale dishes- Proffessor Danwood Chirwa

Now that we know that the list of cabinet appointments is authentic, it is time to call upon all Malawians to rise up once more, raise their voices and reject this cabinet. Once again, Malawians are taken as fools. Newly elected President Chakwera has quickly transformed himself into a good salesman of words and rhetoric while serving the same stale dishes Malawians have fed on in the last 26 years. On Monday, he promised heaven, yesterday he unleashed hell. He’s ripped apart the speech he gave three days ago even before the ink in which it was written has dried. These are the actions of a man who doesn’t understand the moment and what needs to be done. He has reduced the electoral victory to the actions of a few individuals whose main interest is to profit from the state, not through the ordinary remuneration and other trappings ministerial positions offer, but though corruption and looting.

Chakwera and Chilima

Those who have called for a protest must be supported. Here are the reasons for rejecting this cabinet:

  1. The restructing of the government is irrational, with some ministries broken up for no good reason, or having no concrete mandate deserving separate existence, while other important portfolios have been removed or ignored completely.
  2. There’s no manifest bona fides rationale for the restructuring, which is linked to better delivery of the alliance manifesto. On the contrary it is evident that the structure is meant to accommodate the wide net of patronage networks.
  3. The composition of the cabinet reflects back room deals founded on pay for play, corruption and nepotism.
  4. Crooks and known looters have been appointed, sending a clear message that all talk about ending corruption and all gimmicks about shutting down the MRA and other institutions to nip looting was window dressing. We have seen this before, Malawians are not that stupid.
  5. Key ministeries such as health, education, and foreign affairs need competent professionals to run them; to be sure, a medical doctor, an renowned academic, and a seasoned diplomat respectively. Individuals of questionable credentials have been appointed to thes portfolios.
  6. The entire cabinet stinks of incest, and the smell is quite frankly unbearable. Not only has it been set up so that some families loot not just one ministry but two or more ministries.
  7. The cabinet is embarrassingly male dominated, even as the ministry of gender and children has been abolished. If the men who have been appointed we’re exceptional, may be there could be an argument as to merit. But this argument is unavailable because we have some of the known incompetents and crooks on the list. There’s no excuse for marginalizing women in this day and age.
  8. The cabinet lacks regional balance. Once more, the northern vote has been used for the hegemonic ambitions of another region. One should have expected a more fair representation from the north given the critic role it played in ushering in this government. It seems all credit has been given to the Vice President, which is altogether misplaced. Apart from the A-G, I haven’t seen any credible person from the north in this government who can stand up and put pressure to do good. The disproportionately few that are there are mere ‘hand clappers’, to use somebody’s terminology.
  9. There are no stars in this cabinet. All we have is a collection of recycled politicians, spent forces, looters, privileged and spoilt sons of powerful families and a few unknown new additions.

If I am being too bland it is only because I cannot believe that the new President would stoop so low and dampen hopes so quickly. We need some rest please and so do the right thing!