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President Chakwera urges commissioned Officer Cadets to be faithful and trusted

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By Kondanani Chilimunthaka

President Lazarus Chakwera has said the commissioned Officer Cadets need to be faithful in executing their service to gain people’s trust.

Chakwera made the call at Malawi Armed Forces College (MAFCo) in Salima on Friday, 9th June, 2023 when he presided over the commissioning of 81 Officer Cadets who have successfully undergone a 15 months training course at the College.

“The first qualification everyone who serves must have is faithfulness. It is possible to be highly educated and skilled, but not to be faithful, and if you are not faithful, then the people you serve lose their trust in you, and once trust is lost, so is your ability to lead, because what makes you a leader is the trust that others have in you.

So remember that as Officers, what you have received today is not just a commissioning, but a trust”. Said President Chakwera, who is also the Commander In-Chief of the Malawi Defence Force.



Chakwera further urged the commissioned Cadets to keep passion for the service and be example that will inspire others to give their best in serving the nation, adding that with various responsibilities they will be entrusted with, they need to prove themselves of their faithfulness.

In his remarks, Minister of Defence, Harry Mlekanjala Mkandawire expressed gratitude towards President Chakwera administration for its continuous support rendered to the Defence Force, adding that the inclusion of graduating cadets from other countries is a clear testimony of sister relationship Malawi maintains with her neighboring countries.

During the ceremony, a total of 81 Officer Cadets were commissioned, out of which 72 are from Malawi and the other 9 from countries of Tanzania, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Kenya, and Eswathini.

Established in 1978, Malawi Armed Forces College has trained a lot of defence soldiers, and this year out of 81 Cadets, 21 are female officers.

MP hails Chakwera

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By Dean Chisambo

Member of Parliament for Ntcheu Central Constituency Albert Mbawala has hailed President Lazarus Chakwera for raising the Constituency Development Fund (CDF) from K40 to 100 million which transformed the Constituency.

Mbawala said the Constituency is being transformed because developments have been increased courtesy of the CDF.

He said:”we have made tremendous progress in the infrastructure development education sector, transport sector, health sector, economic empowerment of the communities and indeed paying fees for the needy secondary school students.

Mbawala: my vision to transform the Constituency is on track



“We are forever grateful to the president, and my vision to transform the Constituency is on track.”

Mbawala lamented that under the CDF they have managed to construct concrete bridges at Kayimayima,Tchesa,Kame and Malaswa villages.

The lawmaker further said that they have drilled boreholes at Machira, Magora, Lisungwi and James villages.

He also said they have connected fourteen villages with piped water in the areas of group village Headmen Tcheza and Gomeya.

Mbawala said they have also given K3.4 million to cooperatives as the commitment fee for them to access a grant from Agriculture Commercialisation of Malawi (AGCOM).

He said” we have also given 5.4 million to Chimwemwe Milk Bulking Group as the commitment fee to access a grant from AGCOM.

Mbawala also said they have constructed under five clinic and constructing of maternity wing at Dzunje and Kamiza respectively using personal money and donor fund.


The legislator added that they are several development projects that are underway in some villages in the Constituency and they have constructed timber deck bridges at Nkanafisi, Khuzi, Chipungu and Changata using his personal money.

The Minister of Finance announced that the government has increased the CDF when he presented a 2022 to 2023 national budget in April from 40 million to 100 million inorder to increase social development in the all Constituencies in the country.

External assaults ruining economic progress of COMESA region

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By Kondanani Chilimunthaka

On Thursday, 8th June, 2023, President Lazarus Chakwera told Common Market of Southern Africa (COMESA) Summit that external assaults and forces have made it tough for economies within the COMESA region to grow.

President Chakwera was speaking in Lusaka, Zambia during a day-long Summit for COMESA Heads of State and Government Officials which aimed at promoting economic integration among member states through green investment, value addition and tourism.

Chakwera who was attending the COMESA Summit for the first time, said there are two major reality challenges tormenting the region’s member states which need the block to move with speed on economic integration.



“The first of these realities is the devastating period we find ourselves in. Since 2017, ours has been a block of nations under multiple devastating assaults. In the six year period, we have had Cyclone Idai, Tropical storms Ana and Gombe, and Cyclone Freddy. In that same period we have suffered droughts, the effects of the war in Eastern Europe, and outbreaks such as Covid-19 and cholera.

These external assaults have compounded the devastation we were already under from historic systemic vulnerabilities, such as weak food systems, weak financial controls, weak health systems, weak public institutions, unsustainable debt levels, and international trade policies that disadvantage our economies. All of these factors have become the perfect storm that has left us as a block in a weak position in the context of global trade”. Said Malawi leader in his speech.

Further, Chakwera told the Summit in Lusaka that since ratification of African Continental Free Trade Area, there have been forces beyond the continent which have moved into the economic framework to the disadvantage of African countries.

However, President Chakwera said the challenges can be addressed if COMESA member states speed speed up on key pillars of economic integration including working together in sectors of Agriculture, Tourism, and Mining which he said Malawi has already adopted.

This year’s COMESA summit has been held under the theme “Economic Integration for a Thriving COMESA Anchored on Green investment, Value addition and Tourism”.

Man earns 12-years IHL for felonies

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By Andrew Salima

The First Grade Magistrate’s Court in Chiradzulu yesterday sentenced a 25 years old man, Wyson Simoko to 12-years imprisonment with hard labour for committing burglary and theft offences respectively.

State prosecutor Sub Inspector Joseph Marko told the court that, during the night of May 10, 2023 Simoko broke into a house of Rabson Mwiwa and went away with assorted items, all valued at K133,000.00 who was later apprehended by members of the community.

Simoko pleaded not guilty to the charges which prompted the state to parade two witnesses who proved the case beyond all reasonable doubt.

In his submission, prosecutor Marko asked the court to give the convict a stiffer punishment, citing that the offences committed are serious in nature.

In mitigation, the convict prayed for leniency, saying he is a first offender.

In his Judgment, First Grade Magistrate, Smart Maruwasa sentenced him to 12-years imprisonment with hard labour to serve as a deterrent to other would-be offenders.

The convict hails from Witika Village, Traditional Authority Mpunga in Chiradzulu district.

Chakwera tells COMESA to spur Economic integration

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By Staff Reporter

His Excellency the President of the Republic of Malawi, Dr. Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera, has delivered his maiden COMESA speech at the 22nd summit underway at Mulungushi International Conference Centre in Lusaka, Zambia.

Tradition has it, within COMESA protocols, that heads of government and state who assume office in between two successive sessions deliver primary speeches to outline expectations and impress their agenda within the bloc’s system during their tenure.

Other leaders who carried out similar protocols were Kenya’s William Ruto and Libya’s vice president Abdullah al-Lafi.



In his remarks, President Chakwera has called upon the COMESA bloc to accelerate economic integration so that member states collectively recover strongly from setbacks such as Cyclones Idai and Freddy, Tropical Storms Ana and Gombe, droughts, the Russia –Ukraine war, Covid-19 and cholera.

The Malawi leader noted that in the absence of unity, other foreign forces will manipulate African economic systems to their advantage.

“Our economic integration is a matter of urgency because since the time we ratified the African Continental Free Trade Area, there have already been forces from beyond our continent moving into position to work our own economic framework to their advantage rather than ours,” he said.

He added: “As such, if we do not quickly get our act together with economic integration on our own terms, it may very well be that by the time we fully integrate, the mechanism will have already been rigged against us to ensure that the beneficiaries of our economic integration are non-African economies.”
President Chakwera presented Malawi’s economic aspirations as espoused in the national development blueprint, Malawi2063, under what is termed as the ATM strategy.

“I call on all of us to move with speed on the key pillars of our economic integration. Those pillars include working together to increase our productive capacities in key sectors such as agriculture, tourism, and mining (ATM), which we have adopted in Malawi.”

The summit is being held under the theme “Economic Integration for a thriving COMESA, anchored on green investment, value addition and tourism.”

The main thrust of the discussions was on the need for COMESA to consolidate intra-Africa trade which remains at only 17%, a huge contrast to other continents most of who cross-trade with one another between 50% and 70%.

COMESA – comprising of 21 member states – has for many years been the largest free trade area before the advent of what is now the largest FTA in the world, Africa Continental Free Trade Area. It has a population of 580 million citizens with a combined gross domestic product of around US$768 billion.