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Malawi Government to increase Passport Fees

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The Department of Immigration and Citizenship Services has confirmed that fees for passports will be hiked.

The fees are currently pegged at K48, 500 for normal processing which takes 21 days, K58, 500 for urgent processing which takes five days and K68, 500 for express which takes 24 hours.

Director General of the Department, Masauko Medi, said the current fee for passport processing is below the cost of production of the document.

Minister Nicholas Dausi

He said this when Minister of Homeland Security, Nicholas Dausi, toured the Immigration Offices in Blantyre over the weekend.

Medi said the current fee—was arrived at when the kwacha was trading at K480 to the dollar.

Medi said the standard cost of processing and producing a passport is at $100. This means that if the fees are to be adjusted, a normal process for a passport would shoot to around K72, 000.

He said there was no need for the government to keep subsidising the document.

Medi said with the introduction of national identity cards, a passport is no longer a need for identification in the access of services but it is for those wishing to travel outside the country.

“Can a mere local person want to travel? No. If he wants to travel, then he should make a proper plan and save enough money [to acquire a passport]. Otherwise, with the national ID in place, Malawians don’t need the passport as a form of identification,” he said.

In the past, one needed a passport or a driver’s license as identification documents in banks and other facilities.

But Consumers Association of Malawi Executive Director, John Kapito, blames the Immigration Department chief for suggesting that a passport is a preserve for the well-to-do.

“It is wrong to attach the price of a passport to few people who have money and can go outside [of the country] to have fun. Small scale businesspeople need passports to conduct cross-border trade.

“Again, sometimes, poor people go out of the country to receive medical treatment. The government should be putting in place measures to ensure that the passport is a document that is easily accessed by its citizens,” he said.

Daliso Chaponda listed for Rose D’or award

United Kingdom-based Malawian comedian Daliso Chaponda has one more thing to smile about after his radio show got nominated for the prestigious Rose D’or awards.

The event to announce the winners will take place on December 1 at Kings Place in London.

In an announcement on the awards’ website www.rosedor.com, Chaponda’s radio programme Citizen of Nowhere, which airs on BBC UK, has been nominated in the audio entertainment category.

Chaponda’s show is up against five other radio shows, namely It Burns that airs on 7 Digital in Australia, Griefcast that airs on BBC, UK, Documentary on One that airs on RTE radio, Ireland, Brexit that airs on BBC UK and Belgium and 13 Minutes to the Moon on BBC World Service.

Daliso Chaponda

Reacting to the nomination on Wednesday, Chaponda took to his social media pages to celebrate.

He wrote: “My radio show has been nominated for a Rose D’or. Very excited. This was written with lots of research, banging of my head against the wall, hyperventilating from Carl Cooper for my never meeting deadlines and thereafter brilliant editing, intervention on episode 3 series 1 by Gary Delaney which led to the best sketch of both series.”

Chaponda then paid tribute to all members of his team for their support in the production of the series.

“I am so glad it [the radio show] got nominated. Thanks all. Now I need to dry clean my tux,” he added.

Chaponda is an all rounder entertainer who rose to fame after reaching the finals of Britain’s Got Talent television show.

His radio show Citizen of Nowhere first aired on BBC UK in May 2018. The second series started last month. 

According to www.rosedor.com, the Audio Entertainment category in which Chaponda is nominated is taking place for the first time.

Awards chairperson Sofia Helin said the nominees were voted for by 60 international judges made up of media industry professionals.

Helin said: “The shortlist for The Rose d’Or awards this year is brilliantly diverse, and we’re delighted to see so many international programmes shortlisted which reflect the outstanding and varied output of entertainment programming we have seen in the last year across the globe. Our congratulations to all nominated.”

The Rose d’Or (Golden Rose) is an international awards festival in entertainment broadcasting and programming.

Malawi Queens have a new sponsor

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The Netball Association of Malawi (NAM) will unveil new sponsor for the Queens Tuesday afternoon in Blantyre. According to NAM President, Khungekile Matiya, the sponsor is “coming along with a good package for the Queens”.

Khungekile said the Queens, who finished second at the recent Africa Netball Championship in South Africa, deserve better sponsorship package and hoped to secure more sponsorships for Under 20 and 21 netball leagues.

Daud Suleman testimony a game changer- legal scholar Prof Danwood Chirwa claims

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Malawian legal scholar based at the at South Africa’s Cape Town University, Professor Danwood Chirwa has stated that the testimony by Malawi Congress Party (MCP) IT expert and witness in the on-going elections case, Daud Suleman, on Friday was “hugely devastating”.

Professor Danwood Chirwa: Suleman managed to turn the case on its head at this point Suleman: IT expert who has given ‘devastating’ testimony

He said Suleman’s simulation in court on how Malawi Electoral Commission (MEC) computerised election result management system (RMS) was allegedly breached by a ‘ghost’ operator to change the results of the presidential elections in favour of incumbent Peter Mutharika “managed to turn the case on its head at this point” saying “the burden [to prove] has now shifted”.

IT Guru – Daud Suleman

Said Chirwa: “He so powerfully delivered his testimony with the aid of simulation and demonstration, that he left the judges with a clear understanding of what happened.”

Chirwa said Suleman had demonstrated that the IT system which the commission used was “insecure, was manipulatable and was, in fact, manipulated.”

He pointed out that Suleman demonstrated his expertise by arranging and explaining the simulations and their application so effortlessly.

“He is mega credible,” Chirwa said a witness to second petitioner Lazarus Chakwera.

Suleman further provided evidence to back a theory that the results were not credible.

The law professor said Suleman has shown that the IT system which the electoral body used was insecure, manipulatable and was in fact manipulated.

“Reliance on it to pronounce the results, he labored to show, affected the integrity of the entire electoral process and final outcome.

“Expert evidence is a unique piece of evidence. The court has to accept it in its totality unless the opposing party produces its own expert to impeach it,” pointed out Chirwa.

Attorney General Kalekeni Kaphale, who is representing MEC, said MEC’s legal team said the public will hear its response when cross examination starts this Monday afternoon.

But Chirwa said the witness has set “a very high bar” for the respondent’s expert, who has to prove that the IT system the commission used was impregnable and that it was not in fact breeched.

He said it is always a tough job cross examining expert witnesses.

The law professor said if MEC decide to take Suleman head on, the cross examination could bolster his claims as it can allow him further opportunities to explain the problems with the MEC’s system.

“The wise thing could be to cut the cross short and let MEC’s own expert counter the witness later if they have an equally credible and knowledgeable expert,” he said.

Chirwa said there has been objective material evidence so far as the petitioners have labored to paint the picture that a considerable number of tally sheets at streams and polling stations were altered, that some were not signed by monitors, that duplicates were used. And that they have shown that the IT platform from which the results were declared lacked integrity.

“Much of the response to the first line of the petitioners’ case has been to concede that these irregularities happened. What those of us outside court can’t work out is what these irregularities translate to in terms of their impact on the result. The commission has practically admitted all these irregularities but has been trying to explain them away by trying to argue that the altered or duplicate sheets were signed by monitors or that their results match other data, or shifting the blame to monitors..” he noted.

Chakwera’s lead lawyer Modecai Msisha said Suleman, who returns to the witness stand this Monday, had demonstrated clearly how the elections were manipulated, saying the demonstration was “very firm and specific” on its evidence.

Malawi News Online

Minister Highlights Need for Malawi to Stay Prepared for Ebola Disease

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Lilongwe — The Ministry of Health and Population has stressed the need for the country to stay prepared for Ebola disease even though there has been no single confirmed case registered in the country.

The portfolio’s minister, Jappie Mhango, made the statement Friday in Lilongwe at a press briefing to share with journalists the outcome of the Ebola simulation exercise that the ministry with its partners conducted in Chitipa and Karonga on November 5 and 6, this year.

“As part of the preparedness activities, my ministry demonstrated a small-scale simulation exercise in Chitipa and Karonga to see how health workers would react to a real life situation (regarding Ebola outbreak),” said Mhango.

Minister Jappie Mhango

He said the objective of the simulation exercise was to assess the level of preparedness as a country in the prevention and control of Ebola.

The minister cautioned that though the numbers of Ebola cases are now dropping in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and that the country can slightly breathe a sigh of relief, it was important for Malawi to be prepared in case of the outbreak.

To this effect, he appealed to Malawians, especially those in the borders, to avoid aiding illegal immigrants into the country.

“I told people when I went to Chitipa that we will destroy all the monkey bridges on unchartered routes so that people from the Horn of Africa do not access the country through such routes,” Mhango said.

He said such a step would be for the good of the citizens and that the people would rebuild their bridges once it is safe to do so.

According to the minister, the simulation exercise revealed some strengths in how Ebola disease would be managed should there be outbreak.

He cited coordination among health staff and the community, quick mobilisation of isolation tent, fuel and other resources as some of them.

However, the minister also cited some challenges that the simulation exercise revealed, the major one being inadequate human resource in the health sector.

But when asked to comment on the same (inadequate human resource), World Health Organisation (WHO) representative in Malawi, Nonhlanhla Rosemary Dlamini said WHO is training more staff that would be put to optimum use.

She said there would always be inadequate staff as far as health services are concerned, but added that what is required is to put the trained staff to optimum use.

Some of the stakeholders that partnered the Ministry of Health in the Ebola simulation exercise include WHO, UNICEF-Malawi, USAID, Department of Disaster Management Affairs and Public Health Institute of Malawi.

Others are Norwegian Institute of Public Health, the Society of Medical Doctors, Immigration Department, Laboratory Technicians, Police and Malawi Defence Force, among others.

Activities carried out during the simulation exercise included collecting sample, managing the collected sample, shipping of the sample and control room activities, just to mention some.

About three or four weeks ago, a person died at Karonga District Hospital of a suspected Ebola disease.

The Health Minister has since insisted that Malawi has not yet registered any confirmed Ebola case, saying that particular one was tested locally and outside the country and results showed it was not Ebola.