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CDEDI pushes for arrest of racist Susu

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By Iommie Chiwalo

The Centre for Democracy and Economic Development Initiatives (CDEDI) has once more requested authorities including Chinese Embassy to facilitate the arrest of racist suspect only identified as Lu Ke and popularly known as Susu.

The push comes after CDEDI has sadly uncovered yet another tactic and shameless attempt by some sectors of the society, who are trying to defend racist Chinese national Lu Ke by twisting information to suit their selfish interests, and issuing threats to well-meaning citizens who are urging authorities to bring the suspect to book.

In a statement released on Friday June 17, 2022 and signed by CDEDI Executive Director Sylvester Namiwa says the tactics are aimed at diverting attention of the general population on the sins committed by one Lu Ke.

Susu



Namiwa says some misguided individuals seem to have taken advantage of CDEDI’s calls for justice on the matter, and are reportedly busy scheming attacks on some innocent Chinese nationals.

Namiwa feels the conduct is just a deliberate ploy to divert Malawians’ attention from real issues raised by CDEDI and other human rights bodies within and outside Malawi as regards the dehumanizing said videos. 

“It is worth putting on record that the filming incident as it stands is an isolated case by an individual, and not the entire Chinese community in Malawi; therefore, it is not a matter that affects all Chinese nationals staying in this country; hence, we should not use one brash to paint all,” he says.

He has since condemned such plans and those behind them saying by giving the seven-day ultimatum, CDEDI and any of the concerned citizens and human rights campaigners are not in any way calling on anyone to take the law into their hands.

Namiwa further reiterates his organisation’s earlier stand of calling on authorities to desist from any attempts to employ delaying tactics and/or downplaying saying doing so amounts to serious crime against humanity.

He also suggests that since the matter also borders on aspects of profit-making, it is important for relevant authorities to ensure that survivors of the exploitative filming should benefit by way of compensation. 

The CDEDI boss therefore said the zeal employed in blocking South African Dancer Zodwa wabuntu by Minister of Tourism and culture should also be demonstrated in this child exploitative matter.
“Malawians are missing the efficiency of the responsible Minister Hon. Michael Ussi, and the Department of Immigration, including the Malawi Police Service, who exchanged memos until Zodwa, whom the authorities reportedly feared posed a threat to Malawi’s culture, was barred from entering the country,” he says.

Demonstrating that the current one is just a delay tactic, the same Malawi police witnessed the arrest of Erik Aniva after a BBC investigative report and this is the kind of swiftness Malawians expected to see in Susu’s case. 

“It is against this background that CDEDI and all well-meaning Malawians will stop at nothing but push for the arrest of Susu,”

Despite some tactics aimed at diverting attention of state agencies, CDEDI still demands that Lu Ke must be arrested within seven working days, Chinese Ambassador to Malawi to make a public apology to Malawians
and that the Immigration Department, the Malawi Police Service and the Malawi Trade and Investment Centre to flush out all Chinese nationals that are staying or doing business in the country illegally. 

Namiwa says failure by stated institutions to act as demanded, CDEDI wil with no choice but to mobilise the masses to hold peaceful demonstrations until Mr. Lu Ke faces the law. 

Private Sector, key to Malawi’s economic growth

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By Kondanani Chilimunthaka

President Lazarus Chakwera has described the Private Sector as a key to the country’s economic growth, saying it remains one sector that operates on productivity, and discipline of producing things of value in the marketplace.

Speaking on Friday, June 17,2022 at BICC in the city of Lilongwe during the launch of Private Sector Labs, President Chakwera told the nation that he has launched the labs to bring leaders of Government and business captains together to find solutions as to what must be changed to make Malawi a place where business and investments can easily expand, export, and employ.

“If we can answer that question, we will begin to create a private sector that drives Malawi’s economic growth and creates the kind of prosperity that does not involve bribing anyone or stealing anything. I am talking about building a private sector that is capable of sustaining and spreading economic gains by fostering increased savings and capital formation, technology transfer, and better products and services for consumers.

President Chakwera



I am talking about building a private sector that is capable of mobilising and attracting both domestic and external investments. I am talking about building a private sector that is capable of creating employment and growing incomes for citizens.” Said President Chakwera in his speech.

Malawi leader further said; to build such a resilient private sector in the country, Malawians must keep thinking about what must change in order to make the country a place where businesses and investments that desire to produce valuable things find it easy to operate.

“Our central objective in all the changes we will resolve to make in this lab is to ease the manner and cost of doing business in Malawi. And because business vary in size, I have designed these initial private sector labs to target large corporates, to be followed by labs targeting SMEs and cooperatives of a similar size contend with are tackled at the same time. In either case, I have directed senior officials of my Government to be here to listen and work with you on finding solutions that lead to progress.” President Chakwera said.

The President then said the agro-industrialization remains a top priority for his administration and the lab to achieve the Malawi 2063 vision of an inclusively wealthy self-reliant, and middle-income economy, adding that he expects the lab to among others have commitments by various Government Ministries, Departments, and Agencies to implement the changes necessary for private sector growth, adding that he also expects a great commitment by the private sector including financial institutions.

World Bank pledges support towards private sector development

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By Staff Reporter

The World Bank through its private sector arm, the International Finance Corporation (IFC) has pledged to work with the Malawi Government in support of the development of the country’s private sector.

IFC Resident Representative for Malawi and Zambia Madalo Minofu said it is through such support to the private sector that the country could achieve tangible economic growth.



Minofu made the commitment in Lilongwe on Friday during the launch of the Private Sector Lab. President Dr Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera, the brain behind the Lab, presided over the launch.

Minofu said IFC is geared to provide private sector financing for various investments including in the energy and agro-business sector.

UNDP Resident Representative Shigeki Komatsubara has hailed the initiative observing that the Labs would help remove bottlenecks hampering economic growth such as shortage of forex, limited access to capital and others.

However, Komatsubara noted that it was not encouraging that the country’s manufacturing sector is only contributing 11% of Malawi’s Growth Domestic Product (GDP).

He said more could be done to improve the sector.

The Labs are, according to government, meant to operate as a platform for structured interface between the private and public sectors to maximize development impact.

SPC Zamba engages Malawi Development Partners, Unpacks Private Sector Lab

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By Chikumbutso Mtumodzi

Newly-appointed Secretary to the President and Cabinet (SPC), Colleen Zamba has said the upcoming ‘Private Sector Lab’ is critical to government’s objective of job creation because it will help oil the interface between government and the private sector towards the creation of a bustling private, which is the main engine for job creation and economic development.

SPC Zamba was speaking at Capital Hill in Lilongwe on Wednesday, June 15, when she made a presentation to various development partners, including Ambassadors and High Commissioners, on the importance of the Private Sector Lab.

The SPC disclosed a Private Sector Lab, which will be held under the auspices of the Presidential Delivery Unit (PDU), will be officially launched by President Lazarus Chakwera on Friday, June 17, 2022. It will run up until Friday, June 24, 2022.



According to the programme, main issues during the week-long Private Sector Lab shall include taxation, energy, forex and export, access to finance, land, e-visa and work permit, and investors.

She said the lab will identify specific project level issues that are hindering investment with the aim of unlocking investments, and at the same time enable the creation of jobs, increasing manufacturing and earning of forex.

Zamba added that the lab will also help foster collaboration between government Ministries and Departments (MDAs) so that they provide each other information and perspectives for better bilateral understanding.

“The Private Sector Lab is a platform to jumpstart action towards economic growth. This ‘Lab’ is an inclusive process for addressing difficult issues limiting investments required to deliver on Malawi’s economic growth and job-creation targets, which would largely be made possible by the private sector,” said Zamba, further explaining that among other things, the lab will focus on facilitating solutions for policy level and service delivery level issues; identify and facilitate the solving of policy level and service delivery level issues that are hindering private sector growth as well as facilitating sectoral solutioning sessions.

“The lab will also help solve project level issues to unlock investment and impact. It will also provide a platform for enabling collaboration and facilitate sectoral sessions for Non-MDA led discussions to co-create solutions that address some of the issues hindering private sector growth like the creation of a Project Development Facility in the access to finance work-stream,” added Zamba.

The SPC, who before her appointment to her new position was head of the Presidential Delivery Unit, said the process of the lab will include collaboration with Malawi Investment and Trade Centre (MITC), Ministry of Trade and Industry (MoTI), National Planning Commission (NPC), Ministry of Finance and the Malawi Confederation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry (MCCCI) to organize labs and identify and prioritize high impact projects. It will also identify issues hindering progress and group issues requiring similar stakeholders for resolving, she said.

Added Zamba: “The lab will also schedule problem solving meetings with specific agenda; and convene all required stakeholders to find solutions as well as effect the solutions. It will also manage periodic and ad-hoc performance and reporting for each project and intervene where needed.”

Among the stakeholders that will be at the lab are the implementers of the solutions such as CEOs for private sector firms like those in the agro-processing industries, energy, and also key personnel at MDAs such as Principal Secretaries (PS).

President Chakwera launched the the Presidential Delivery Unit on October 18, 2021 as an extension of his office to ensure that government ministries, departments and agencies are implementing the key priorities that his administration promised to deliver for Malawians.

“If you are a private sector player and are facing political, or legislative, or administrative obstacles that are hindering the operations of your business sector, I urge you to report such obstacles to my Delivery Unit so that I can see to it that they are addressed with speed,” Chakwera said at the launch.

Zamba was appointed as SPC on May 31,2022. She did not take time to get down to business, and has since banned all lakeshore meetings and conferences by all MDAs as government engages an overdrive in austerity measures to cut spending.

President Chakwera has also cancelled scheduled trips to international conferences in Rwanda and Austria as part of the austerity measures. He has since designated Cabinet Ministers to attend the conferences on his behalf.

Dedza Youths oriented on Human rights

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By:Yankho Maunjiri

Power to Youth has emphasized on the need to include the youth in decision making.

Program Coordinator for Power to Youth Program Thandizo Mphwiyo said this after Centre for Human Rights Rehabilitation (CHRR) through Power to Youth Program with funding by Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs conducted a 2 days orientation to youths from different TA’s of Dedza district on harmful practices.

Mphwiyo said what they want to achieve is to ensure that youths are well engaged and empowered to claim for their rights.


She further said their role will be to monitor human rights violations and inform mitigating strategies.

“The unique thing about Power to Youth Program is that we are involving the youth themselves, youths are at the centre of implementation of any initiative”, said Mphwiyo.

She said for example the composition of Community Victim Support Unit’s (CVSU’s) doesn’t have youths in it yet the youths are the ones facing a lot of challenges.

Mphwiyo added to say that these CVSU’s are not youth friendly which makes is hard for the youth to report the challenges they face.

She said most youth in Malawi are facing a lot of Gender Based Violence, with harmful practices that are affecting their welfare and contributing to a lot of teen pregnancies and child marriages.

” We are targeting them so that they start questioning some of these social norms”, concluded Mphwiyo.

Some of the youths who participated in the orientation, Juliet Kulima from Traditional Authority Tambala and William Charles from Traditional Authority Kasumbu said the orientation is an eye opener and it will help them to identify and report the abuses that take place in their communities.