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Malawi’s governance gets a needed jolt



By Burnett Munthali

The cancellation of the Malawi Revenue Authority’s (MRA) security services tender has sent a clear message: accountability matters. The National Advocacy Platform (NAP) welcomes this decision, communicated in letters dated 2nd January 2025, as a necessary step towards restoring public trust.

This move demonstrates the power of public pressure and civic vigilance in shaping governance outcomes. The MRA’s decision to cancel the tender and re-advertise it is a recognition that procurement processes must be transparent, fair, and free from conflicts of interest.

However, NAP cautions that this is just the beginning. The real test lies in ensuring that the re-advertised process is insulated from political influence and elite capture. Institutional credibility is not restored by silence or technical compliance alone, but by open, verifiable adherence to procurement law and constitutional principles.

Kondowe



The stakes are high, and the scrutiny is warranted. Where procurement processes intersect with politically exposed persons or prior conflicts of interest, the standard must be heightened vigilance, not procedural minimalism. In public procurement, perception is substance, and where citizens reasonably doubt impartiality, institutional legitimacy erodes.

NAP demands that MRA publicly disclose clear evaluation criteria and conflict-of-interest safeguards, ensure independence of procurement decision-making structures, provide full transparency on beneficial ownership of bidding entities, and guarantee equal treatment of all bidders, free from political or personal influence.

This cancellation is a test case for Malawi’s public institutions, a chance to demonstrate their capacity for self-correction when confronted with constitutional and ethical breaches. NAP will closely monitor the re-advertisement and conduct of this procurement process, ready to invoke lawful civic, parliamentary, and legal measures should the process relapse into opacity or abuse of public trust.

Public procurement exists to serve citizens, not power or privilege. This cancellation opens a new chapter in restoring trust, legality, and constitutionalism in public procurement. Laws and due process must not be suspended for convenience, institutions are not above scrutiny, and public resources are not private entitlements.

The NAP chairperson, Benedicto Kondowe, and national coordinator, Baxton Nkhoma, sign off on this statement, emphasizing that accountability is non-negotiable.

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