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MRCS donates 25 oxygen concentrators to Health Ministry

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By Chisomo Phiri

In its quest to an effective COVID-19 response, the Malawi Red Cross Society ( MRCS) with the support from Singapore Red Cross through the International Federation of Red Cross and Crescent Societies ( IFRC) on Tuesday donated 25 oxygen concentrators worth 22 Million Kwacha to Ministry of Health.

Speaking during the handover ceremony, Head of Disaster Management Aston Mulwafu, said MRCS is aware of the so many challenges Malawi is going through in fighting against COVID-19.
” Malawi Red Cross Society has been on the ground working with the Ministry of Health since the first case was recorded in 2020, besides a number of projects that it continues to implement in various districts, hence the need for such support”, said Mulwafu.

On her part, IFRC Senior Operations Officer for Halare Cluster ( Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe) Hilary Motsiri said MRCS and its International Partners know the magnitude of the pandemic and how is it affecting Malawians.
” These oxygen concentrations will be of value to the Malawi community, especially now with the fears of the new variant, which is posing a threat to most countries, hence the donation will ensure that the country is ready incase of rising cases.

Government through the Deputy Minister of Health Chissie Kalamula Kanyasyo commended the Malawi Red Cross Society for the donation, saying it is proving that it remains a trusted partner in humanitarian assistance.
” Malawi Red Cross remains a strong partner in the healthcare services and has been a leading partner in the fight against COVID-19, and this donation is a one key evidence of the bond that exists between government and MRCS”, said Kanyasyo.

The 25 oxygen concentrators are expected to be distributed to a number of government and CHAM health facilities across the country.

Take responsibility for your health, youths in Karonga asked

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By Emmanuel Moyo

Pamoza Tingakwaniska, a Karonga based youth organization has asked youths in the district to take proper responsibility of their sexual reproductive health saying this is key in preventing unwanted pregnancies.

This comes as the organization through it’s Fiska Ulato project discovered that youths in the district are facing a lot of myths surrounding sexual reproductive health.

In an interview, Media officer for the organization, Gomezgani Mhango, described the myths as a hindering block that youths have to fight and get out by being responsible.
“Youths need to know that these myths are not true and that their lives are not a community project, so they should not leave their sexual reproductive health into the control of another person,” she said.

She has since pointed out that the organization will empower youths in the district on sexual reproductive health through different means that are conducive to the youths.
“We will do this task through interface meetings with youths, Radio programs, leaflets, singing competitions and drama because we hope this will attract the youth to give an ear to our message,” she said.

On her part, Vice Chair for Hope youth club in Karonga, Millium Mkandawire, commended the project saying this will help the excel and fight violence in relationships.
“We are happy with this initiative because it has come to a right district where we face a lot of myths in sexual relationships so we hope to be empowered in a way that we will be responsible youths who know sexual reproductive health rights,” she said.
Pamoza Tingakwaniska is implementing Fiska Ulato project in areas of Traditional Authority Mwilang’ombe and Mwakaboko with funding from Breuckmann Foundation, Germany.

14-year old Divine Kaponda emerged the top winner in AMAI’S Kids Got-Talent competition in Ireland

By Chisomo Phiri

A fourteen year old Malawian girl Divine Kaponda who lives in Dublin, Ireland has been declared the top winner in the Association of Malawians in Ireland ( AMAI) Kids Got-Talelent virtual competition held virtually on Association’s official Facebook page on Sunday,November 28, 2021.

Making the announcement in a televised program on Association of Malawians in Ireland ( AMI)’s Official Facebook Page, the competition organizer and chair for the entertainment Magga Mateo said Divine was voted by the judges as the top winner for displaying amazing skills in arts, drawings and painting.
” She deserves the top winner for the competition. She has displayed very amazing skills. She got talent and that is why we are giving her this amount so as to make her work hard”, She said.

She thanked all kids who participated in the competition for being outstanding and phenomenal.
” We say thank you for all of you who took part in the competition for being outstanding and phenomenal. Let me also pass my gratitude to our sponsors Moto Money for coming in at the right time. As for the judges, Franz Amin, Vida Garmano Michelle Lofts and Diolet Chakwiya, I cannot say much for the amazing job you have done. AMAI is so grateful, she thanked.

In his words, Chairperson for the Association of Malawians in Ireland Henry Mkumbira Phiri said the Association decided came up with the competition in order to identify skills among Malawian kids who live in Ireland.
” As an association, we decided to come up with this competition so as to identify skills among Malawian kids who are living here in Ireland. AMAI will also conduct the similar competition next year”, said Phiri.

In her remarks after receiving the amount, Divine thanked AMAI for organizing the competition which she said will take skills among Malawian kids in Ireland to the higher level.
” We are very thankful to AMAI for coming up with this wonderful competition. This prize will help me to work extra hard and extend my skills. I hope this will also encourage others who have not done well to work hard and improve. We say thank you AMAI”, thanked Divine.

Divine walked away with €100 equipment to MK100,000.00 seconded Angelica Khonje who went away with €75 which is equivalent to MK75,000. 00 and third were insight kids who went away €50 which is MK50,000.00. The rest 19 kids from across divide who participated in the competition received €20 (MK20,000) each for the participation.

The Kids Got-Talent virtual competition started on November 6 to November 28, 2021 and was sponsored by Moto Money online banking in Ireland.




Who was the late Emily Mkamanga?

By Chisomo Phiri

Born on December 27, 1949, Emily Mkamanga was a Malawian writer and social commentator. She was one of the few well-known women writers in Malawi.

Biography

Emily Mkamanga was educated at Livingstonia, Uliwa, Lilongwe Girls’ Secondary School and the University of Malawi, where she studied in the Bunda College of Agriculture and graduated in 1971.After working at Chitedze Agricultural Research Station, she worked for fifteen years as Agricultural Information Officer at the National Bank.While still there, in 1990, she published The Night Stop, a novel about “the long-suffering wife of a promiscuous lawyer”.

The late Emily Mkamanga



Social and political writing


Her retirement from the bank in 1993 coincided with the end of Dr Hastings Banda’s 30 years in power. In 2000, her account of those years was published by John Lwanda’s publishing firm Dudu Nsomba. Called Suffering in Silence: Malawi women’s thirty year dance with Dr Banda, the book was described as “an analysis of the obsessive psyche of a modern tyrant” and a “polemic” that became “a form of prosecution of Banda”. The “dance” of the title refers to the women’s dancing arranged at political rallies praising Dr Banda.[While the dancing had once been associated with female activists it came to be required of all women and controlled through the Malawi Congress Party leadership.Mkamanga said women were coerced and exploited to satisfy the ruling dictator, even though he presented himself as a guardian to women: as a nkhoswe, meaning an authoritative uncle or brother in Malawian matrilineal cultures.Many people in Malawi would describe the dancing as a traditional part of their culture, an idea promoted by Banda,while Mkamanga considered that women in Malawi are generally guided by “patriarchal traditions and cultural norms”.In the same year that Suffering in Silence appeared, she also co-authored Road to Democracy: role of the media in the 2000 Malawi local government elections: final report.


She was a regular columnist for the Nyasa Times, and also wrote political and social opinion pieces elsewhere.She had been called a “social historian”as well as commentator or journalist. In 2013,the President of the Malawi Writers Union described her as one of the only three “known” women writers in the country.(The others were Walije Gondwe and Janet Karim.) She served on the boards of various institutions including ActionAid in Malawi, the Media Council of Malawi, the Journalists Union of Malawi, Youth and Society, and the Institute for Investigative Journalism.


Mkamanga died on November 28, 2021 at the age of 72 at Wezi Medical hospital after a short illness. She is survived with a husband, three children and a grandchild.

DPP loses elections case, Concourt orders party to pay costs

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Durell Namasani

The High Court sitting as a Constitutional Court in Blantyre has dismissed with costs a case in which the opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) sought the interpretation of Section 75 of the Constitution in regard to an inquorate Malawi Electoral Commission that managed the June 23, 2020 fresh presidential election and subsequent by-elections.

The DPP further wanted the Constitutional Court to nullify those elections.

Justices Sylvester Kalembera (Judge-in-Charge), Rowland Mvundula, Dorothy NyaKaunda Kamanga, Annabel Mtalimanja, and Thom Ligowe were hearing the matter.

In their ‘unanimous’ verdict, the Judges differed with the Attorney General Thabo Chakaka Nyirenda that the matter was an election petition, which was supposed to be brought to court within seven (7) days as prescribed by the Presidential and Parliamentary Act (PPE).

Attorney General Thabo Chakaka Nyirenda

The Judges, however, agreed with Nyirenda on nine grounds he raised before the court, praying that the case be dismissed.

The DPP had asked the court to quash the results of the said fresh presidential poll after it emerged that four Malawi Electoral Commission (MEC) commissioners were illegally appointed by the former President, Mutharika despite having managed and certified the election and its results.

It all started in June 2020, when the Malawi Congress Party (MCP) sought judicial review of the appointment by the then President of the Republic, Peter Mutharika. The High Court held that the said appointments were, indeed, irregular and illegal.

On June 2, 2020, Justice Kenyatta Nyirenda ruled that former commissioners Linda Kunje, Jean Mathanga, Arthur Nanthuru and Steve Duwa were illegally appointed by former Republican President and DPP leader Peter Mutharika and as such he invalidated their appointment.

The DPP argued that since the Electoral Commission commissioners were irregularly and illegally appointed, then it follows that there was no Electoral Commission within the meaning of section 75 of the Constitution, to conduct, manage the June 2020 fresh presidential election. Hence, the purported conduct, and management of the said elections by the said inquorate commission, was void ab initio.

The DPP also argued that the said mischief cannot be cured by section 42 of the General Interpretations Act (GIA). In other words, section 42 of the GIA is inconsistent with section 75 of the Constitution.

The Concourt on Friday agreed with the Attorney General that the DPP having been “guilty” of breaching the Constitution and the relevant statutes in the first place, cannot be allowed to benefit from their own illegal acts.