Showing posts with label malawi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label malawi. Show all posts

Saturday, May 25, 2013

One Of Africa's Brightest President: The President Of Malawi Sells Presidential Jet For $15 Million To Aid Her Country



Cash-strapped Malawi has found a buyer for the luxury jet that had once belonged to late leader Bingu wa Mutharika.  A government official said on Wednesday that the presidential jet has been sold for $15 million, raising much need funds for the impoverished African nation.

Mutharika bought the jet in 2009 for $22 million, a purchase that was widely criticized as a waste by many, including Malawi’s main bilateral donor Britain.  The country reduced its aid to the African nation by 3 million pounds because of it.

Current leader of Malawi, President Joyce Banda, who took office in April 2012 after Mutharika died of a heart attack, was lauded when she made the decision to put the luxury jet up for sale.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Malawi Records 1000 HIV Infections Weekly



In Malawi, over ten percent of the population is HIV positive. The AIDS-ravaged country records an average of 1,000 new cases weekly, a top government official said on Saturday.
“It’s a great concern to us that despite efforts by government to prevent HIV and AIDS, the country continues to register about 1,000 new cases of HIV every week,” Edith Mkawa, a senior health ministry secretary in charge of nutrition, HIV and AIDS, told reporters.
“The number is very high. It is frustrating the fight against HIV pandemic,” she said.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Malawi president, Joyce Banda, explains pay cut, vows to sell official jet



Joyce-Banda[1]

Malawi President Joyce Banda has said that she has decided to take a 30 per cent pay cut as a demonstration that she is prepared to sacrifice in line with government’s austerity measures.

Vice-President Khumbo Kachali announced last Friday that he and his boss would take a 30 per cent pay cut as part of the Banda administration’s austerity measures.

Banda on her return from her maiden appearance at the UN General Assembly in New York on Tuesday said, “The 30 per cent is what I got to become President of Malawi, so basically what I have done is to go back to my salary as vice-president.

“It may not be significant, it may not be a lot, but for me it’’ a demonstration that I am prepared to sacrifice.”

Banda, who is one of the few women to rule an African nation, ascended to power following the sudden death from cardiac arrest of her predecessor Bingu wa Mutharika in April.

“I’m finishing President Bingu wa Mutharika’s term. I didn’t know that I was going to be president by this time, but I’m doing the best that I can, but the 30 per cent came along with that job, it can go,” she said.

Banda, 62, said when she told the vice-president to make the announcement while in New York, Kachali volunteered that he too would take the salary cut, the Pan African News Agency reports.

But she said she would not force the rest of her cabinet to follow suit.

“I think it would not be fair for me to insist that because this is the decision that I have made I should then insist that all cabinet ministers should do the same,” she said.

“It’s up to them.”

As part of her government’s austerity measures Banda also said her government was selling the controversial presidential jet in a fortnight.

Her predecessor, Mutharika, got into trouble with Malawi’s biggest aid donor, Great Britain, when he used donor money to buy the plane.

London reacted by reducing its annual aid allocation to Malawi by three million pounds.

Banda said, “My position on the plane is that I shall never fly that plane again, it has to go.”

Vice-President Kachali said the plane would be sold “in two weeks.”

The decision by the Banda administration to allow a 49 per cent devaluation hit Malawians hard in the pocket.

Wild-cat strikes followed with people accusing leaders of not suffering together with the people.

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Source : punchng[dot]com

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