Friday, January 31, 2020

Conserve natural resources, save Serval cats


SAD: THE HEART OF THIS SERVAL CAT HAS BEEN STILLED MERCILESSLY. Picture credit: M'theto Lungu

It may take years for some Malawians to abandon the belief that wild creatures are nobody's property.
The truth, which is accessible like the mid-day sun in summer, is the wild creatures and us are Mother Earth's children; children that must take care of each other.
Sadly, as this truth takes time to sink in, natural resources in Malawi continue to be depleted. Wild animals continue to be hunted for no other reason but to satisfy insatiable appetite for things natural.
This is what has happened on Friday in the capital Lilongwe, where some eight villagers visited a graveyard in day-light just to kill the Serval Cat that has been fending for itself for six years at the graveyard.
This type of cat is also common on Mulanje Mountain, but the numbers are being depleted fast. Why? Because people eat the cats. They call them Bvumbwe, just to find an excuse to victimise them and turn them into food.
This is also the reason the Lilongwe 'butchers' proffered as justification for killing the beutiful cat whose species are disappearing fact.
This is unlike the case in the United Kingdom, my current home, where wild cats loam freely, budgers go about their normal business without looking left or right as if they were crossing a road in Nigeria, and natural resources thrive.
I have talked about wild animals that live freely in the trees and grasses of the Amex Stadium, the home of Brighton and Hove Albion Football Club.
I go there every day, I see the wild animals everything.
In the end, Africans are their own greatest enemy. They destroy natural resources and claim to be the victims of climate change.
Change your ways, Africans. Have a heart for natural resources. 

Thursday, January 30, 2020

Coronavirus: "A latest prejudice just waiting to happen"


PRESS RELEASE
London, UK
Thursday, January 30th 2020
The Federation of International Employers (FedEE) writes at 12:00 pm GMT

"A latent prejudice just waiting to happen"

There is a growing danger of discrimination against those of Chinese origin because of the current viral health scare.

The Federation of International Employers (FedEE) is warning employers that they will face litigation and loss of reputation if they allow such prejudice to enter the workplace.

Such abuse is particularly a problem in France where one region's newspaper has just used a photograph of an Asian person in a mask under the headline "Alerte Jaune" (yellow alert). The newspaper has since apologised, but the Chinese community have started using the hashtag "JeNeSuisPasUnVirus" (I am not a virus). In Canada too there are reports from Toronto of stigmatization of the Chinese community.  Many reports of open harassment in public have been made and there is likely to be a surge of prejudice that may well centre on the workplace - not just in France and Canada, but all around the World.

According to Robin Chater, Secretary-General of FedEE, "This social disease will be institutionalised once those of Chinese origin are denied jobs, refused hotel accommodation or access to transport. Linking a disease to racial prejudice is something new, as it never arose over HIV/AIDS in respect to those of African origin or for those of Arabic origin over MERS. Perhaps it is driven by the same underlying spirit of economic envy as that which Trump's America has for China - a deep seated prejudice just waiting for the right trigger to emerge."

For further information please contact Eustace Fernsby at the FedEE Press Office on press@fedee.com and 0044 203 608 4412.

What is FedEE?

The Federation of International Employers (FedEE) is a leading corporate membership organisation for multinational companies. It was founded in 1998, with financial assistance from the European Commission. Today it is an independent body with corporate members all around the globe.

Wednesday, January 29, 2020

Malawi's diplomatic partners speak on pending election judgement

JOINT STATEMENT FROM THE AMBASSADOR OF THE UNITED STATES, THE HIGH COMMISSIONER OF THE UNITED KINGDOM, THE AMBASSADORS OF JAPAN AND NORWAY, THE AMBASSADOR AND HEAD OF DELEGATION OF THE EU, IN AGREEMENT WITH THE EU HEADS OF MISSION IN MALAWI -  THE AMBASSADORS OF GERMANY AND IRELAND, ON THE POLITICAL SITUATION IN MALAWI

We acknowledge the anticipation and tension surrounding the impending release of the Constitutional Court decision in the matter of the presidential election result challenge case. We collectively reaffirm our support for Malawi and its citizens as you forge a democratic future, based on an adherence to democratic values, inclusive justice, and constitutional rule. 

Malawi can draw on an impressive history of institutions and leaders stepping forward to safeguard your democracy and ensure peaceful resolution for internal tensions.  At this pivotal moment in Malawian history, we call on both the petitioners and the respondents, political parties and their supporters, and indeed all Malawians, regardless of their political affiliation, to respect the decision of the court and to adhere to the path outlined in Malawi’s constitution and electoral laws, including on the right of appeal.  For those who choose to exercise their right to demonstrate, we urge you to do so peacefully and legally, and for security personnel to proceed with balance and restraint.

As the country moves forward, we urge all political leaders to come together and lead an inclusive dialogue, in line with the National Peace Architecture report (2013) that addresses broad concerns held by the Malawian people and that supports a common understanding for the future.


Thursday, January 23, 2020

'Moving An African Country From Poverty to Prosperity: Opportunities And Challenges'


●●●President Professor Peter Mutharika's Speech Delivered At The University of London, School of Oriental and African Studies, on January 21, 2020.

I have been asked to speak about developments in Malawi and the on African continent as they relate to our quest to increase investment opportunities.

In turn, I also request to locate this conversation in time because I cannot speak about the present without speaking about the past.

As we say in one of our African proverbs, he who does not know where he comes from cannot know where he is going.
In other words, we have been here before.

Foreign investment is not necessarily a new thing in Africa. The idea of investment has a history in Africa. What is changing over time is the practice of that concept.

The concept of investment goes together with that of trade. These are twin concepts. One puts their capital on the ground to produce goods that must be traded elsewhere. Trade is the end of investment.

The history of Western trade and investment in Africa began as a form of exploitation on the continent. The much-abominated African Slave Trade was certainly a form of trade – a trade in African human beings who were defined as commodities of that trade.

Later, a wave of investors came, gave themselves land and established companies that went into mining and farming. In fact, it was the need to protect these investors that led to the Scramble for Africa in 1884 in Berlin.

It was investment and trade that led to the formation of the nation state as we know it today in Africa. We have a classic example where an entire nation could be named after one investor. Zimbabwe and Zambia were respectively called Southern Rhodesia and Northern Rhodesia after one man – John Cecil Rhodes.

The student society of Oxford think of Cecil Rhodes as an imperialist. He is to them a “dark blot “ of our history whose statue must be taken down from the gardens of Oxford University to signify how we loathe imperialism in this country.

But one man’s imperialist is another man’s investor. In other words, Cecil Rhodes was an investor. From the loot of Africa, he invested in building a good part of Oxford University.

As I argued at Oxford University three years ago, we must admit that no history can be wished away in human existence.

I asked one question to the students of Oxford:
Suppose we take down the statue of Cecil Rhodes because he is an imperialist and a dark blot in our history, what do we do with the many buildings which Cecil Rhodes built at Oxford University in which the same students happily sit to learn about the evils of imperialism? 

This is my point. Colonialism or any past imperialism cannot be erased from our history.

 The nexus between trade and foreign investment on the one hand, and exploitation on the other is also a fact of African history that cannot be wished away.

For about half a century, Europe has downplayed its exploitation of African resources by promoting the idea of aid. The popular image is that the West is the benevolent giver while Africa is the poor receiver.

The truth is that every year, more wealth leaves Africa than the aid and loans that enter the continent. While Africa receives about $162 billion every year, about $203 billion leaves the continent to Europe. Africa is losing  $41 billion or 32 billion pounds every year.  This is according to Honest Accounts 2017 Report, also published in The Guardian— your paper here!

Africa is not a poor continent, although its people are poor. The narrative that Africa is a poor continent is constructed and popularized to justify aid and overshadow the exploitation of the continent.

We are made to believe that Africa is a corruption-infested continent full of bad leadership because the world has to be kept blind from this global syndicate of exploitation. We are convinced to find a reason to blame Africans for their situation.

Likewise, our starting point in my country is that Malawi is not a poor country but only its people are poor. We refuse to accept that we are a poor country. As one African proverb says: It is not what you call me that matters; It is what I answer to that matters.
 
In moving an African country from poverty to prosperity, it matters all the way to set out from a position of positive thinking and a positive self-concept. We need to reject and unlearn all the myths, stereotypes and negative concepts of African people. We cannot achieve anything positive with negative thinking.

The foregone discussion asserts a number of positions. First, Western trade and investment in Africa have for years carried a history of exploitation.

 The problem is not foreign investment itself. But the problem has been the motive and the manner in which it has been practiced.

It would be missing the point to demonize foreign investment just because it has been used as a form of exploitation. There are countries which have developed because of foreign direct investment. Some countries in Europe have developed because of the Marshall Plan and the huge sums of funds transferred from the US to Europe after Second World War.

On the contrary, aid has never developed any country anywhere. No country has ever developed because of aid. At best, aid can only be a stop-gap measure in the transition to economic autonomy if that aid is invested in production sectors of the economy such as agriculture and energy.

One of the great opportunities that Malawi is riding on is the advent of aid fatigue within the Western society. More than ever, there is growing movement of interrogating the aid culture with taxpayers, the media and non-state actors questioning their governments on the efficacy of aid.

The aid culture is declining against the rising demand for trade and investment. Malawi believes that we can develop with foreign direct investment, development of the private sector, creation of jobs and creation of new wealth on the principle of a free market.

The moment I came to lead Malawi, we aggressively started foreign direct investment programme. We also undertook public sector reforms to improve the doing-business environment.

These changes have included legal system reforms because it is our responsibility to set up laws that prevent Malawi from being exploited.

We have since then been fast rising in the World Bank Doing Business Index. We are now set to do business with the world. We need business investors who can invest in the production sectors of the economy.

Moving from aid to trade necessitates that we must invest in the production sectors of the economy. We need investments that will lead to industrialization of Africa.

 Industrialization will ensure that we are capable of producing goods.

We cannot participate in trade if we cannot produce goods that we must take to the market. Africa must industrialize.

 Malawi must industrialize to create jobs for the people and goods for export. The question is: what are we doing to create an investment environment that moves us from aid to trade?

We have begun with encouraging Malawians to develop a self-dependent spirit and do away with the dependency syndrome in our economy. For the last five years, Malawi has managed to function without budgetary support from outside.

Without budgetary support, we have managed to make Malawi’s economy the fastest growing economy in the Southern African region. Without budgetary support, we have done the following:

We have reduced inflation from 24 percent to a single digit.

We have reduced interest rates form almost 50 percent down to 13.5 percent.

We have taken our import cover from the lowest point to the highest point in our economic history. Our import cover has risen from below 2 months to 6 months.

We have made our local currency stable and predictable for four years.

We have raised economic growth above the Sub-Saharan and IMF global average growth. I found GDP Growth Rate at 2.4 percent when I started leading Malawi five years ago. Now we can expect growth rate to rise as far as 6 percent in the 2019/2020 financial year.

One of the things we are doing is investing in the Youth. We are capitalizing on the fact that in Africa, about sixty percent of the population  is the Youth under the age of 35. We have a similar situation in Asia.

 For us, the Youth population is an opportunity and not a problem.

One of the challenges has been that our education system had for a long time been too academic. There are instances when every student who went to school in Malawi was supposed to know who discovered the Congo River or Lake Malawi. This is the kind of education colonialism left and was adopted for a long time.

Sometimes, every Malawian learner was taught to dissect an insect and label all its parts. In that process, you would qualify a person and certify them as educated. But what is the use of that education? This dissection and labeling of the insect is in fact a simulacrum of many other instances of our curriculum.

What we have done in Malawi is to introduce a programme called skills development targeting the Youth. We are building community colleges across the country.

We have a practical curriculum that focuses on industrial skills. In doing so, we are creating a human engine for industrialization for us to move from a predominantly importing and consuming country to a producing and exporting nation.

Our current emphasis on providing industrial skills to the mass of the Youth is a paradigm shift in our education system because we want the Youth to be the driving force of industrialization in Malawi and a growing private sector.

This new emphasis of empowering the Youth with industrial skills is focusing on the mass of the Youth who finish secondary education but cannot go to University.

 While some continue on the vertical access to education by proceeding to University, the majority of the post-secondary Youth now have horizontal access to education by spreading across various technical community colleges.

At the same time, empowering the Youth with industrial skills is our formula for enabling the current generation of the Youth to be included in economic participation.

 Empowering the Youth with industrial skills is decisive in economic participation.

My conviction is that no society can develop without a skilled labour force. This is the reason why we started  a skills development  programme with the community technical colleges.

We have also ensured that Malawi must remain a democratic society because this is essential to economic participation.  I believe citizens only prosper when given freedom but within the law.

Whatever negative perceptions that you may read about Malawi, the reality is that Malawi has an internationally well-rated government.

 The United States Government, thrugh the Millennium Challenge Corporation, assessed Malawi in the 2019/2020 financial year as follows:

In economic freedom, we scored 91% and in Trade Policy and 91% in Access to Credit.

Under Ruling Justly, Malawi scored as follows:

Control of Corruption – 63%

Government Effectiveness – 69%

Rule of Law – 90%

Freedom of Information – 75%

Civil Liberties and Political Parties – 88%

Under Investing in People, we scored an average 69%.

We have been equally rated highly by:

The Mo Ibrahim Index on good governance

The World Justice Project Index on good governance

And the IMF has consistently praised us for excellent economic performance. In fact, IMF has said Malawi is economically over-performing. This is the truth about my country.

Our philosophy is that in whatever we do, we believe in being accountable to principles, the laws and the people.

As I spoke at Washington University recently, as a Law Professor, I had always thought the essence of democracy is the Rule of Law, as most scholars do. But my people changed my political philosophy. I have now learnt that the essence of democracy is accountability. In good governance, everybody must be accountable to someone else – and let God be accountable to himself.

Let me conclude in this way. Malawi is doing everything possible to use investment opportunities and move from aid to trade. This is how we want to move from poverty to prosperity.

For this reason, our plan is to ensure that:

Every community must be food secure. We have launched a greenbelt revolution to make Malawi food secure.

Every community must have electricity. We are taking electricity to every community in a rural electrification programme.

Every community must have a good road network. For the past five years, we have been constructing more roads than any other Government in the history of Malawi.

Every community must have a good secondary school. We have just launched a programme that will build a good secondary schools for every community. Every child who finishes primary school must go to secondary school.

Every community must have a community technical college. The Youth who finish secondary education in every community but cannot go to University must be trained in industrial skills. And we are already constructing these colleges.

Every community must have access to good health care. We have launched a Universal Health Coverage program in which Malawians must access health care in every 5 kilometres.

Every community must have potable water. We have already rolled out a piped water supply program across the country.

I want people in every community to create their own jobs, have basic social services for them to be productive and be happy.

It is by empowering the Youth, men and women with access to education, industrial skills and access to capital that we can industrialize Malawi and create new wealth. This initiative must be done in a free and democratic society with a government that is accountable to its people.

Wealth created must be for the benefit of every community. Ultimately, the goal of every government is the happiness of its people. In the end, I hope to leave Malawi happier than I found it.

Thank you for your attention.

Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Of Western Foxes and Air Pollution



It is clear that, apart from incurring the wrath of Mother Nature, who has since decided a new name for her punishment— Climate Change— for the most part the African plays the protagonist in the film of self-destruction.

CLEAN AIR: Brighton and Hove City. Photo credit: Richard Chirombo
Come to think of it. Any edible animal that comes into contact with people in the village has just encountered death. Literally.
In countries such as the United Kingdom (UK) things are different. Wild ducks mingle with people without attracting ire. Admiration is the prevalent emotion.
In fact, it is ironic that my first sight of a fox should be in the UK and not Africa. Did I say fox? No, I mean foxes. I have come across 20 foxes since September 23, 2019 and I am still counting.
Actually, there is one brown fox at the University of Sussex that grabs food from my Serbian friend once or twice a night. It catches him unsuspecting, although, in truth, he suspects it anyway.
“A fox attacked me yesterday,” this has become his song.
I always tell him he is exaggerating because foxes do not attack people. At least they do not attack me. Instead, they are friendly, if not because they scavenge for food in people’s residential areas, it could be because they are striving to be as friendly as most of the dogs.
Of course, not all dogs are affable. Some three of them have barked at me, culminating in the unfavourable scenario where their ‘masters’ apologise to me. I say, “no worry. African dogs bark all the time.”
Talking of human-wild animal interaction still, Brighton and Hove Albion has become a good point of reference. At the home ground, namely the Amex Stadium, I know two Kalulu-the-Hairs that feed at night, looking people in the eye while munching grass.
And, goodness me, those who tend the outside do not tamper with its habitat, for they know where nature flourishes good feelings flow ceaselessly. Maybe that is why the team is doing better than last season in the Premier League.
Last season, the hopelessness of relegation hovered round-about the place. Others say this is because the then coach, Houghton, was playing negative football away from home.
It could be that the Kalulu-the-Hair was not happy.
One more thing. While investors have taken over Lake Malawi, stopping local people from swimming in front of the investors’ tourist attraction sites, the situation is different in Brighton and Hove City, where people spend only their breath going to Brighton Pier and the sea museum close by.
If one spends money on transport or food going to the tourism attraction places, it is as good as they have paid cash to appreciate the good things there. This must be common sense but it is not.
In Africa, Malawi in particular, the situation is different. Accommodation is expensive.
Talking of pollution, the impact of climate change is being minimized here more than in Africa. Zero-emission buses have become the in-thing in cities.
Of course, some buses that emit environment-friendly gases and in negligible quantities are still on the roads, but the situation is better still anyway, and I can bet that the buses will be off the streets at least by 2025, maybe shipped to Africa to pollute the air round-about.
So far so good.