A man in his 40s was hit by a car and died hours later on Sunday night in Mzuzu, Police say.The man was struck while he was crossing the road at around 7pm.Deputy Public Relations Officer for Mzuzu police, Cecilia Mfune, said they have since arrested Ken Nkhoma who was driving the car, a Toyota Hiace minibus registration number MZ 3393.
On the night, Nkhoma was coming from Mzuzu going to Luwinga and upon reaching Chinese junction he hit the pedestrian who was crossing the road from right to left.road accidentThe man whose full particulars are yet to be identified but is in his late 40s was taken to Mzuzu Central Hospital where he died hours later due to head injuries.The suspect will appear in court soon to answer the charge of causing death by reckless driving contrary to section 126 of Road Traffic Act.Police have since advised drivers to observe traffic rules which require that speed in cities shall be 50 km per hour.The suspect Ken Nkhoma, 29, hails from Zayo village, Traditional Authority Mtwalo in Mzimba district.
The Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) director Lucas Kondowe has said the graft-busting body is seeking direction on the trial involving former president Bakili Muluzi and has up to Friday to inform the High Court the course of acourt
Muluzi, who ruled the southern African country between 1994 and 2004, and his co-accused, his former personal assistant Lyness Violet Whisky,stand acc used of diverting at least US$ 13 million of what the State had claimed was donor money meant for various government development projects to his personal accounts.
He denies the charges, and vehemently alleged they were pressed on him for political persecution by his successor Bingu wa Mutharika.
According to ACB boss, the graft-bursting body simply has no objective material evidence that Muluzi was siphoning from state coffers during his decade as leader of the nation.
According to Africa Confidential publication, in early July Kondowe took the unusual step of visiting media houses to explain that after lengthy enquiries costing billions of kwacha, there was not enough evidence to proceed with the case against Muluzi.
Muluzi, 73, was first arrested in July 2006 accused of diverting $11 mn. in funds that had been gifted by Libya, Morocco, Kuwait and Taiwan.
Lead prosecutor and Kondowe’s deputy, Reyneck Matemba, recused himself on 5 May 2016 from the Muluzi case on “personal grounds”.
Kondowe claimed to have consulted three previous ACB directors – Gustave Kaliwo, Justice Rezine Mzikamanda and Alexius Nampota – on the Muluzi case and draw conclusion that the case isn’t strong enough.
The ACB boss stressed there is no political hand in the direction of Muluzi case, saying bureau is an independent institution that makes independent decisions – a point backed by Malawi Law Society.
Meanwhile, according to local press, debate for enactment of a legislation obliging political parties in Malawi to disclose their private financiers to deter parties from obtaining funding from “dubious” sources.
Such a bill championed by Centre for Multiparty Democrcat (CMD) was already submitted to Ministry of Justice and Constitutional Affairs in January this year.
“The absence of legal frameworks governing private financing of political parties is a huge deficiency in a democracy for although money is an asset in politics, it can at the same time be a liability. The relationship between money and politics remains one characterized by contention and controversy in every democratic state,” argued political analysts Dr Augustine Magolowondo
“It is not only the question of access to resources that can skew and endanger the democratic play field; it is also how those resources are acquired, who provides them, under what terms and how they are used that is equally critical. As the saying goes, those who pay the piper call the tune.
“ It is very likely for a party to be held at ransom by those who finance it. In the worst case scenario, it is even possible to have a party in power that is remotely controlled by actors outside it and whose (actors’) interests are inimical to society at large,” Magolowondo further argues
He states that Malawi is in an urgent need of a “clear and robust” legal framework that will ensure that party financing does not degenerate into a liability to the democratic cause.
A constitutional law expert Edge Kanyongolo, who is lecturer at University of Malawi’s Chancellor College, agreed on the need to have a robust legislation on political party funding, as he is quoted by The Nation saying it is the empowerment of the citizenry – and the media – by improving their access to public information and thus their knowledge of the “strings” behind the political parties.
Patrick Zeus Phambala, a Lilongwe-based political and social commentator, proposes the establishment of a political party funding regulatory body which, in his view, would widen public interest in the running and overall ownership of parties.
According to Phambala, unregulated party funding is responsible for the demigods in political parties.
Malawi Police in Lilongwe have rearrested a whistle blower who has risked his life to unearth corruption activities at Bwaila Hospital, a key factor that has sunk public services at the healthy facility.
Ramsy Mushani, spokesperson for Lilongwe police station confirmed the arrest on Monday of Donnex Banda, the executive director of Youth Health Network.
“He was arrested because he was not honouring his bail conditions,” said Mushani.
However, his statement sharply contradicted that of principal secretary for Health Macphil Magwira who said Banda was arrested because he was intimidating staff at the hospital.
His arrest comes at a time when he has been speaking loud against corruption at the public hospital when the former district health officer Mwai Mwale hired an expensive catering firm to provide food for patients and night shift staff.
However the hospital failed to pay a huge debt which has led to the abrupt end of provision of food to both patients and staff working on night shift.
Mwale has since been transferred.
Some speculations say the MM Catering firm belonged to him. He denies the allegations.
Civil Society activist Billy Mayaya has since asked for the immediate release of Banda.
Mayaya said Banda is a whistle blower who always wants to see an end to corruption at the hospital.
During his arrest, he was calling for the transfer of more top hospitals whom he accused of corruption.
The Malawi government has slashed the number of beneficiaries for the Farm (Fisp) from 1.5 million to 900,000 in the 2016/17 agricultural season.Spokesperson for the Ministry of Agriculture Hamilton Chimala said the development follows a slash of K17 billion allocation to Fisp program in the 2016/17 budget by the ministry of finance“In the budget, the minister allocated MK43 billion out of MK60 billion to the program and this will target only nine hundred thousand famers who are poor from rural areas of the country,” said Chimala.
Fertiliser subsidy malawiFertiliser subsidy beneficiaries reduced.
UN.The Malawi Government introduced the large scale national programme in 2005 in order to subsidise agricultural inputs, mainly fertilizer and seeds for maize production.The program saw smallholder farmers paying for a bag of fertilizer at a very low price while some seeds were being provided for free to citizens.However, Fisp program became under criticism after some stakeholders deemed it to be unproductive in helping Malawi to be food secure.Stakeholders argued that the program was not meeting targeted people and it was used as a channel for government officials to pump funds into personal accounts.