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Muvi wa Chilungamo claims Chakwera failing to keep his word

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By Vincent Gunde

Muvi wa Chilungamo Revolutionary Party (MRP) says Malawi is in deep crisis of economic, constitutional, political and social turmoil because President Dr. Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera does not keep his word.

MRP says to show that President Chakwera does not know what he is doing and that he is a man of his words, he has defied his own words by making a trip to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) just to witness the Swearing in ceremony of President of the DRC Felix Tshisekedi.

President Dr. Lazarus Mccarthy Chakwera defied his own words flying to DRC



The Party says President Chakwera directed austerity measures and directed that no Minister or Principal Secretary must take international or regional trips out of Malawi and that all the fuel and travel allowances allocated be trimmed by half.

In a statement signed by its President and Commander in Chief Bantu Saunders Jumah, MRP says unfortunately, with the measures in place, Ministers and members of cabinet kept travelling and there is no proof that there were deductions in the allocation of travel allowances.

The MRP has claimed that seeing that the directives were not working and that his economic strategies were not functioning and that the Kwacha lost its value by 44 percent, President Chakwera again directed “Volume 2” Austerity measures by banning all international trips of all civil servants including all trips he planned.

The Party says President Chakwera also commanded civil servants who were outside the country to come back and their trips cut short in order to save the ailing economy unfortunately, more than three Ministers were abroad and none of them came back as per the president’s directive.

The MRP has cautioned President Chakwera not to take Malawi and its citizens for granted observing that he is breaking his own declaration proving his complete failure of the country lamenting that the President thinks that citizens of Malawi are fools or cannot be able to hold him accountable.

“This country respects and admires the Office of the President but in Chakwera’s 4 years in office, he has diluted, belittled, humiliated, and mocked the highest office, a President of the country must be thoughtful, devoted, resolute, acute and a promise-keeper,” reads part of the statement.

The MRP says President Chakwera has clearly shown his failure and is not fit to hold such an office calling on the government of President Chakwera to realize that this country is not amused of his dishonest saying citizens are disappointed.

The party has claimed that a President who does not walk his talk, who does not keep his word and who forgets what he promises, risks the country into chaos, havoc and turmoil observing that this is the state Malawi is, it is in pandemonium, in destruction and in confusion.

The MRP says as a new political party coming to change the political, economic and social trajectory of Malawi, condemn and fault President Chakwera for the mess the country is in observing that no country will stop corruption when the president is a liar.

The party has further claimed that no country can develop when the president does not honour his words, and no country can move forward when and if the President of the country runs or governs in dishonesty and distortions.

Malawi Economic Growth within 4 years

By Burnett Munthali

I want to provide leadership that makes everybody prosper, that deals decisively with corruption and theft of public funds and a leadership that will follow the rule of law,” President Reverend Lazarus Chakwera told the BBC. – 28 June 2020_

The fiscal deficit remains high despite efforts towards fiscal consolidation. The Malawi Economic Monitor (MEM) emphasizes the restoration of macroeconomic stability, the support for growth recovery, and the protection of the poor from shocks. The Special Theme of the 17th MEM highlights that Malawi’s rate of electricity access is among the lowest in the world, and enhancing electricity access is key for economic development and the achievement of Malawi 2063.

The Malawi Economic Monitor (MEM) is a biannual World Bank report series. The MEM provides an analysis of economic and structural development issues and prospects in Malawi. The publication intends to foster better-informed policy analysis and debate regarding the key challenges that Malawi faces in its endeavor to achieve inclusive and sustainable economic growth. It is intended for a wide audience, including policy makers, business leaders, financial market participants, academia, and civil society organizations engaged in Malawi’s evolving economy.



December 2020

The pandemic induced a sharp recession in many countries across the globe. Malawi’s economy was heavily affected, with growth projected at 1.0 percent in 2020, down from earlier projections of 4.8 percent. With population growth around 3.0 percent, this represented a 2.0 percent contraction in per capita GDP. Global and domestic factors emanating from the pandemic are affecting Malawi’s economy, including: 1) disruption in global value chains and trade and logistics; 2) decrease in tourism; and 3) decrease in remittances. Lower international oil prices, on the other hand, helped reduce the import bill and alleviated fuel and transportation price pressures.

Services and industry sectors were particularly hard hit, leading to a heavier impact in urban areas. However, favorable weather conditions supported a strong agricultural harvest, particularly for maize, which was supporting growth and food security. Yet, production of key export crops, particularly tobacco, declined. Poverty reduction in Malawi has stagnated in the last 15 years and is expected to worsen with the pandemic. The account deficit was projected to expand to 19.6 percent of GDP in 2020, up from 17.8 percent in 2019.

June 2021

Malawi was affected by a severe second wave of COVID-19 (coronavirus) cases starting in the last weeks of 2020. Case numbers peaked in January and gradually subsided through April, when restrictions were relaxed. Growth in 2020 was strongly affected by the pandemic, falling to an estimated 0.8 percent, down from pre-pandemic projections of 4.8 percent. The pandemic’s impact on the services and industry sectors was partially offset by a strong agricultural harvest.

Services and industry slumped amid the ongoing disruptions caused by the pandemic to global value chains and trade and logistics, decreases in tourism and remittances, and dampened demand due to social distancing measures. Agricultural production estimates for 2021 were strong, but the pandemic still weighed on economic activity. Maize production was expected to increase to 4.5 million tons, a 17 percent increase over 2020’s bumper harvest. Business sentiment was showing some improvement in early 2021 but was still below pre-pandemic levels.

December 2021

Economic growth was projected to pick up from 0.8 percent in 2020 to 2.4 percent in 2021, primarily driven by one-time increases in the agricultural sector. With a population growth rate around 3.0 percent, however, this level of economic growth equated to a contraction in per capita output. Favorable weather, as well as increased fertilizer use due to the Affordable Inputs Program (AIP), led to record harvests. While agriculture accounts for the bulk of overall growth, growth in services and industry sectors improved but remained tepid. Malawi began a fourth wave of infections induced by the Omicron variant, and the Government modestly tightened restrictions.

With less stringent social distancing policies, demand improved from low levels. However, the private sector still faced multiple concerns which weighed on performance and investment. These included limited availability of foreign exchange, compulsory liquidation of foreign exchange, inflation on imported items (particularly fuel), perceptions of heavy taxation, limited credit, and cumbersome regulation. Headline inflation increased to double digits in November and prices increase heightened concerns about the cost of living.

June 2022

The 15th Edition of the MEM underscored significant deterioration in the government’s finances, with the deficit reaching its highest level in over a decade. Malawi’s economic growth was expected to decline further due to these chronic imbalances, which heightened by severe weather events. The Ukraine-Russia war added a new crisis to what was already a challenging economic climate, with rising prices for fuel, fertilizer and other commodities impacting foreign reserves and exerted pressure on inflation.

While risks to the Malawian economy tilted to the downside, the government begun implementing critical policy reforms that were aimed to address macroeconomic imbalances and secure a recovery. In the context of these fiscal constraints, the Special Theme of the 15th MEM highlighted the importance of deepening fiscal decentralization, strengthening the intergovernmental fiscal transfer system, and delivering quality services that reach poor and vulnerable households.

December 2022

The combined effects of adverse weather, acute foreign exchange shortages, disruptions to electricity, and the high rate of inflation, meant Malawi continued to face an economic slowdown. This report showed the emerging impacts of the economic crisis where higher government spending continued to widen the fiscal deficit, exerting pressure on the government’s fiscal consolidation plans. Malawi’s public debt was assessed to be in distress, though ongoing debt restructuring negotiations helped ensure debt sustainability over the medium term.

July 2023

Malawi’s economy continued to struggle amidst a devastating cyclone, rising inflation and a protracted macro-fiscal crisis. The economy weakened by foreign exchange shortages that constrained the importation of essential commodities and production inputs as well as a generally unfavorable external environment. The fiscal deficit remained high despite efforts towards fiscal consolidation. The MEM emphasized the restoration of macroeconomic stability, the support for growth recovery, and the protection of the poor from shocks. The Special Theme of the 17th MEM highlighted that Malawi’s rate of electricity access was among the lowest in the world, and enhancing electricity access was key for economic development and the achievement of Malawi 2063.

Timothy Mtambo: The Young Blood that dazzled the globe

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By Leonard Kavwenje

Timothy Pagonachi Mtambo, currently concentrating on personal businesses, political reposturing, Citizens For Transformation (CFT) redefining and League of Transformation (LOT) building shall remain one of the most powerful human rights activists and political game changers of the century.

A man whose golden silence transmits vocal emotions into the public shall indeed always find spaces in the pages of Malawian history. A man whose golden silence is sarcastically interpreted as confidence and satisfaction with the current administration shall always remain a monument for the generations to come. The young blood that dazzled the globe.

Comrade Timothy Mtambo

However, Malawians need not to panic and anticipate demonstrations of fireworks of 2018 to 2020 resemblance as the country fast approaches 2025 General Elections. It is not that Mtambo is indifferent to the outcries of Malawians but he is adaptive to the demand of re strategisation to achieve a common goal. A better political landscape for Malawi. Mtambo shall always respect the voice of Malawians at all cost, no matter what comes along the way.

The grave mistake some Malawians commit is to think Mtambo possessed a physiological hatred towards the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). The fact comes out clear that Mtambo led Malawians to conduct peaceful demonstrations. Mtambo and all Malawians demanded observance of political tranquility and electoral justice through the Human Rights Defenders Coalition (HRDC). Unfortunately, the attacks that DPP made surged protesters’ aches and fired public iracy.

But how does Mtambo view the current government? This is the question that lingers in most Malawians. The fact is Mtambo has nothing wrong to do with the citizens of Malawi neither the Tonse government. It would be a reasoning flop to base the performance of the Chakwera-led administration on one personal opinion. Right? It is of no surprise that there is no clear evidence of Mtambo’s bitterness towards the people of Malawi neither the government. Insulting Mtambo on social media is clear evidence that Malawi is still a powerless democracy governed by amateurism and well organised ignorance. For Mtambo, the ministerial appointment was part of national service. Ministers come. Ministers go. Malawi shall remain Malawi. Mtambo is focusing on generational mandate that will liberate Malawians from the political, economic and social bondages. Mtambo is a man to watch on the stage of politics.

The name of Mtambo is of great historical significance in the arena of human rights. Mtambo is a true symbol and standard of patriotism. He ventured into human rights activism at the age of 29 in 2013 if we disregard his Students Union proactivity at the Chancellor College. It is self-telling that he was born a defender not made a defender. He was not there for money but passion. He spoke for all. Such a young man is a good example for all young Malawians who are ready to sacrifice their lives for a better Malawi.

Malawians cannot talk about the Tonse government without talking of Mtambo. He is one of the fierce and brave men whose citizenship voice diluted lumps of undemocratic acts with punchy messages for meaningful change. He played a key role for the existence of this government. The best way this government would have treated his determination was to stabilise him in government in the process of sending images of hope and determination to all young Malawians that change is possible and influence is ageless. Unfortunately, we are living in a society in which the fool lead and the wise follow. Mtambo is not in government as you read.

That Mtambo receives public pressure to demonstrate against this government which he supported to be throned is true. The opposition parties including other disgruntled Malawians pile political and civic workloads on Mtambo. But the fact is, government checks and balances need not only to hinge on one man. Let all political parties including the main Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and all other political institutions lead the way. There is need for robust and massive political activity. Failure to understand this phenomena will only end up in abusing the name of Mtambo while retarding development of Malawi.

Good Malawians need not to sink so low and conclude that Mtambo has forgotten rights of Malawians. Forcing Mtambo to go to the streets is not the only way of contributing to the solutions of political and socio-economic quagmires rocking our beloved nation. Let our consciences not be guided by spoonful knowledge and baseless opinions. The contributing elements of the current national economic atmosphere can not only be heaped on President Chakwera and his government. If some developed economies are shaking due to a wide range of unforeseen circumstances, then what is Malawian economy after all. Undoubtedly, having formed part of the government between 2020 and 2023 as a cabinet minister, Mtambo is surely conversant and adept of fragility of Malawi’s economy set up as a response to both slight and extreme economic and environmental setbacks. Let us not settle for the less and capitalise on any highest degree of mediocrity and blame Mtambo as a causative agent of the government challenges. There is need to learn to speak only when we have something of full national meaning. But if blocking the political road of Mtambo is based on hate, then it shall always be difficult to destroy good and strong men. If we demand Mtambo to lead the way, the best method is to powerfully support his political ambition under his banner “Citizens For Transformation (CFT): A People Power Movement.”

Considering the political chemistry of the Tonse government, pandemics and environmental shocks hitting our economy, it is unjustifiable for Mtambo to demonstrate against this government today. Wisdom is expensive than folly. He can not be organising demonstrations just to earn money as others are doing. Whenever Mtambo demonstrates, there is meaning and poetry of leadership. Malawians have the power and right to judge who is right and who is wrong. Happy and blessed Sunday!

Looking back and closely at Coca-Cola

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By Burnett Munthali


Back on May 8, 1886, the world’s first Coca-Cola was served at Jacobs’ Pharmacy in Atlanta, Georgia. It was the creation of Dr. John Pemberton as a tonic for common ailments. He likely had no idea what was in store for his product, the company, and an industry that would grow into the giant it is today.

Today, on my birthday, I look back at the years when I struggled to drink Coca-Cola as the gas in it was so strong that I felt something on the middle of my head, inside my nose and eventually tears came out of my eyes at the first sip of it. It is for this reason that I preferred fanta to Coca-Cola during my childhood days. However, over the years as I grew up, I became fond of Coca-Cola more than fanta again as the taste for fanta felt like so babyish to me. Then as I was reading today, I came across an article which has prompted me to write something about this popular drink.



China expelled all foreign companies, including Coca-Cola, in 1949. After the re-establishment of diplomatic relations with the US in 1979, China allowed the return of the famous drink.

When the People’s Republic of China (PRC) was formed in 1949, all foreign companies were asked to cease operations and leave the country. Coke shut down operations in China and its bottling plants were nationalized by the government.

North Korea and Cuba are the only places you can’t buy Coca-Cola. No matter where you go, it’s comforting to know you can always enjoy a Coca-Cola. Well, almost anywhere. While this fizzy drink is sold practically everywhere, it still hasn’t (officially) made its way to North Korea or Cuba, according to the BBC.

In 1909, the Pure Food and Drug Act passed, and the United States government seized 40 barrels and 20 kegs of Coca-Cola syrup because they considered the added caffeine to be a harmful ingredient. One of the first noted criticisms of Coca-Cola was that it produced serious mental and motor deficits.

In the past, some countries in the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, have also faced temporary bans on the import or sale of Coca-Cola due to concerns about the company’s impact on public health or other issues. Coca-Cola was not officially banned in Cuba, but it was not widely available.

The Coca-Cola Embargo

Those two countries dealing with the misfortune of not having coca-cola or coca-cola products are Cuba and North Korea.

India’s Supreme Court demanded that Coca-Cola reveal its secret recipe — guarded for the past 120 years — so that the allegations of high pesticide levels could be verified with further tests. Coca-Cola pulled out of India in 1977 after the government insisted that it reveal the formula. Berkshire Hathaway is the Coca-Cola Company/Owner.

The dark history of Coca-Cola is that Coca-Cola was originally marketed as a medicine and contained cocaine, which was believed to cure a wide variety of ailments. Coca-Cola’s rapid global expansion was largely due to deals made during the war, despite supplying both American soldiers and Nazi Germany with coke.

President Chakwera congratulates Fr. Vincent Mwakhwawa on his consecration as Auxilliary Bishop of Lilongwe Archdiocese

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By Cedric Nkungula

President Dr. Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera has congratulated Reverend Father Vincent Fredrick Mwakhwawa on his consecration as Auxiliary Bishop of Lilongwe Archdiocese.

Fr. Mwakhwawa’s consecration took place on Saturday 20th January 2024 at Civo Stadium in Lilongwe.

In a statement, Chakwera said Fr. Mwakhwawa’s journey from seminary and his ascendancy to the new position now reflects a steadfast devotion to ministry.

Reverend Father Vincent Fredrick Mwakhwaw

“The first lady and I extend our heartfelt congratulations to you Father Vincent Fredrick Mwakhwawa for your consecration as the Auxilliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Lilongwe. Your dedication to the clergy of Lilongwe, service as vicar general and leadership in the Pontifical Mission Societies exemplify a profound commitment to our faith. Your journey from seminary to your position now reflects a steadfast devotion to ministry,” reads part of the statement.

“May your pastoral wisdom continue to guide the Archdiocese of Lilongwe and the church at large. As you embark on this new chapter, our prayers accompany you. We pray for God’s blessings on your episcopal ministry ahead.”

Reverend Father Mwakhwawa was appointed as the Auxiliary Bishop of Lilongwe Archdiocese on 15th November 2023 by Pope Francis. Until his appointment, Father Mwakhwawa was Vicar General of the Lilongwe Diocese.