Dear
Madam President Joyce Hilda Mtila Banda,
Let me first congratulate you for making it to the hot
seat.
You have always referred to Presidents Bakili Muluzi and
Bingu wa Mutharika (May His Soul Rest in Peace) as ‘Abwana’ – Your boss.
And I feel anxious that now you are the ‘Boss’ yourself.
When you fell out of grace with your second boss
President Mutharika, you became ‘wiser’ and talked so much on how best the
government was supposed to run so that the common man out there is the ultimate
beneficiary. I believe your conduct will also prove on whether or not what you
were saying was all garbage or you had a point.
In His veritable wisdom God has put you on the mantle of
leadership so that you put some breaks to the rampaging wheel of the economy
which long lost its track and is straying in the bush; but in order to ensure
that what contributed towards its derailment is reversed, everything is in your
hands so that the country can get back to its prosperous ways.
You must be very lucky person to become the country’s fourth
President. The position you are occupying Madam was first occupied by late
President Ngwazi Dr. Hastings Kamuzu Banda. But you are lucky because you have
seen where your colleagues went wrong and where they slipped off it is where
you will put your footholds for you to keep going and in the end create a
perfect regime, although perfection is only for God.
Forget that your mediocre performance will be palliated
by your being a woman; I for one would expect you to perform, nonetheless.
Don’t
ignore the hospitals
I want the South Africa Rands or the US Dollars every
time I seek for it at the bank. I need to roll down my vehicle at a fuel pump
and fill the tank without much ado. I want to be diagnosed properly and treated
with suitable medicine every time I am sick.
Remember, President Mutharika thought he would fly to
foreign hospitals to get treatment when he will become sick and no wonder he paid
a deaf ear to all the cries from our villages that public hospitals had no
medicine.
But God never rendered him the opportunity to get sick
first so that he enjoys the attention of medical experts of the world. He had a
cardiac arrest while deep in his the line of duty and died soon later.
Reproductive
Health
Your Excellency, in 2010, you became a member of the Global
Leaders Council for Reproductive Health and I know it is not in
vain that your presidency will mix well with this for the benefit of our
country, considering our maternal, child and neonatal mortality rate.
Would you please re-look our situation and establish if
at all our efforts to reduce the figures and fulfill our bit on the MDGs was
due to lack of political leadership or inadequate resources? Imagine we are the
second worst country in the world after Sierra Leone that has a shocking
maternal mortality rate.
I need to commend you for the drastic actions taken less
than a week in office when you directed that the two gynecologists who have
been waiting for an appointment letter to start working at the Ethel Mutharika ‘Safe
Motherhood’ Hospital do get such letters as quickly as before close of business
on the day you made your directive – thus April 10, 2012.
Search
the Forex for us
We have deficiencies in the supply chain of our fuel as
well as sugar, not to mention medicine. All this I know is because some where somehow
the executive botched up in ensuring that forex was available.
On Medicine, what UNICEF and other donors did and
supplied medicine into our hospitals is shameful.
While we all applaud them for the gesture, it is a shame
because it is like people organizing themselves to start fending for your
family because as the father you have failed to provide bread on your table.
I need to remind you Madam President that when we were
voting for you and your predecessor on that single DPP ballot, we were in fact
hiring you to take care of our purse and provide for the country by ensuring
that forex is available so that by extension, we should also have medicine,
fuel as well as ensuring that there is no cut for all the supply chain for our
basic necessities.
What it means is that when you failed to provide these,
it will be a vote of no confidence, that your predecessor failed to accept and
instead used force to cling to power when he even murdered over 20 youths on
July 20 last year.
I know you were never given an opportunity to show your
leadership skills and ensure that you were doing what we voted you for, now you
have no excuse.
We know your predecessor said fighting corruption was
his number one mission. But was it not apparent that all that gibberish was
meant to hoodwink donors into giving us their monies when we were not up to it,
no wonder they stopped us in our tracks.
Declaring
your assets
Instead, the President who had nothing on him when he
was ascending to power became a multimillionaire overnight in all the
currencies.
He built a multi-roomed, up-stairs home at Ndata, he
started dishing out millions to all and sundry, he used to allocate millions to
state house and then to the presidency in the national budget which he was
failing to account for. He became so big headed that even when parliament would
summon him he thought he was larger than us the voters who had hired him for a
short period to take care of our country, to explain to us through parliament
how he was managing our resources.
I don’t want to trouble you to go back to our
constitution and read this so I will provide it for you right here.
Section 88 A (1) of our Constitution reads and I quote:
“The President and members of the Cabinet shall not hold
any public office and shall not perform remunerative work outside the duties if
their offices and shall, within three months from the date of election or
appointment, as the case may be, fully disclose all their assets, liabilities
and business interests, and those of their spouses, held by them or on their
behalf as at that date; and, unless Parliament, such disclosure shall be made
in a written document delivered to the Speaker of the National Assembly who
shall immediately upon receipt deposit the document with such public office as
may be specified in the Standing orders of Parliament.
(2) Any business
interests held by the President and Members of the Cabinet shall be held on
their behalf in a beneficial trust which shall ne managed is such manner as to
enclosure conformity with the responsibilities and duties of their offices.
(3) The President and members of the Cabinet shall not
use their respective offices for personal gain or place themselves in a
situation where their material interest conflict with the responsibilities and
duties of their offices.”
End of quote Madam.
Now how come your predecessor is said to have acquired a
Presidential Villa and Yatch in Portugal at a whooping price of US$18m;
built Ndata which is worth 14 billion Malawi Kwacha; lavishly spent 200 million
Malawi Kwacha on his birthday; acquired a $60m hotel in Portugal through the
Reserve Bank of Malawi (RBM) and ordered that Malawi Savings Bank
(MSB) at Ginnery Corner in Blantyre do extend a K400M loan to
Mulli Brothers Ltd to purchase Bestobell.
In the first place President Mutharika never declared
his assets and I should also hasten to ask you, did you ever declare your
assets as Vice President? If anything he used to brag about how rich he was then
when he was conducting political rallies as if that is what the quoted piece of
legislation above says.
For your benefit Madam, President Mutharika was a bad
financial manager and he miserably failed to run his Bineth Farm in Zimbabwe
which forced him to get back here to try his hands on a minibus business which
also failed miserably.
It was only after President Muluzi’s greed for power
having hit a wal with attempt to stay in power for life through open term bill,
supported by Opposition leader John Tembo and third term that he started
looking for a ‘bovine’ personality he would install on the seat and remote
control from the backseat.
At the time Muluzi made Mutharika Deputy Central bank
Governor he had nothing on him. And it is surprising he started dishing out
such big monies like that.
I suspect lack of the country’s knowledge on the wealth
of the President before he ascended to power is where the problem of stealing
from our coffers start from.
Madam President, I know I have been to some of your
property including your lakeshore home in Chintheche; which is imposing yes and
I would not be surprised if you improve it further.
It will however be wrong if such improvement will start
raising eyebrows and while you will feel so big not to bother give the nation
an account of how that has been achieved, as was the case with your
predecessors, I hope you will spare us such a headache this time round, by at
least attempting to make any unconvincing effort to explain.
Nepotism
I always wonder Madam President what fuels what? Does
nepotism fuel gluttony or it is gluttony that fuels nepotism? Your predecessor
President Mutharika was a shame that you need not emulate. He was so myopic
that he divided the country on tribal lines, something his previous colleagues
never did.
With his Mulhakho wa Alomwe tribal grouping, he filled
all influential positions in the country with his kind. Just check the head of
Judiciary, Central Bank, the Police, Immigration; I am not sure about the Attorney
General and the Malawi Defence Force Commander, MRA, MACRA, Head of Treasury
and the list is long.
Unashamedly he never had any conscious and those that
were supposed to speak against it, were never taken seriously. What is
disturbing is that those that were benefitting to such divisive acts never
listened to the voice of reason.
You have an opportunity Madam President to better this
record or correct things.
Within your ranks you have one similar character that
feeds on nepotism in Brown James Mpinganjira. If you so decide to give him any
position ensure that his wings are clipped, so that he does not soar higher
that reason.
Relationship
with the Media
Remember where we first brushed shoulders Madam
President? It was while I was working at The Chronicle Newspaper which your
predecessor finished off; for he never let the media operate as a free entity
and vital organ of our democratic apparatus.
You went ballistic when I wrote a story about you while
at the Ministry of Gender and how you managed UNICEF provided resources meant
for Orphans and Vulnerable children.
Lucky for me I had all the necessary documents that I showed
in your face when you summoned me and my Editor Pushpa Jamieson.
I vividly remember how you threatened me that your husband
was a retired Chief Justice and that you would sue me for the story and you
never forgot about the issue. Every other time I called you for a different
story you would still remember it.
There was a time you were with your fellow lady
ministers in Parliament and when I greeted all of you, you never responded, and
still showed your anger two years after that story was published.
Now I know how you personally feel about the media and I
am now very afraid of the whip that you will hold over our heads as you watch
our every move while discharging our duty as the fourth estate.
I know this might also be aggravated by a team of your
Media Machine that you will put at your state residence and your office as has
been the case with your predecessors.
Propaganda
Machinery
I remember to have confessed at one time that chivalry,
that virtue I must show the institution of the State House to demonstrate my
deference to the residence of this nation’s first citizen seem to have been
eluding me.
Pity, it was not out of my own making; I don’t want it
to continue feeling the same.
I have known from experience that a composition of
people who run the state house second guess their purpose and grope in the dark
as a result in order to find meaning of why they have to be where they are. They
thus become a propaganda machinery that infiltrates the media apparatus of the
state like MACRA, MBC etc. I hope your appointments will avoid this Madam.
State
House Media Team
It is demeaning to make out that the State House thinks
it should co-exist alongside the mediocrity of righting the wrongs of the
media, believing that it walks within its ‘holier than though’ attitude it
desperately tries to exhibit through its cheap propaganda as was the case with
Mutharika’s style.
Not in a too distant past, we had a kind of personnel who
religiously believed in the propaganda of ‘Press Release Theory’.
They had all the characteristics of shenanigans and
sycophants who wrongly thought they were within their parameter of duty to
scurrilously dispute anything that appeared in the media about President Bingu
wa Mutharika.
The strange thing is that even when these people are
replaced, they tend to continue from where their friends left off.
Good example is even when Charles Namondwe entered the
scene as new Director General of State Residences; he was trying to walk the
same route that had seen others fall by the wayside. He never revoked any
memory to tread carefully realizing that he took over from an overzealous Chief
of Staff of State Residences Ken Zikhale Ng’oma who ended up shooting himself
in the foot.
In my experience as a media practitioner I have realized
that the State House institution, to start with, is a fortress of ‘secret
information’ be it common and classified where when you stumble unto something
that needs your seeking its clarity whoever is in custody of such information
shortchange you with utmost pleasure.
When you salvage the little information that is adding
up, write a story as a result, they turn ballistic, and become sententious
about a version, which they say, is precise but nonetheless still scruffy.
It is a pity they are bigheaded and never see it of
relevance to put records within their taste when a journalist is developing a
story. Until a story is written and when our Septuagenarian leader took notice
and chastised them or realizes on their own that some shouting from Mutharika
is on the way, then they would rush to dispute the story through a press
release.
As a media person, my duty is to crack the reticence
associated with what I call public information like how the taxpayers’ money is
extravagantly spent. It is common knowledge that the State House staff will be
sanctimonious when giving out any version of story for public consumption
knowing well whose skin they have to protect.
The observations above are reprieve of blame shifting
where authority fails to accept that it is failing to look at the picture with
open eyes and realize that the media and the state house will never share the
same point.
Even if we write stories that are to the taste of the
directorate of the state residences still some sectors within it will find them
lacking. Nevertheless, since we will be trying to find out information that
belongs to the public, which the statehouse gatekeepers will try to hide, then
we will always be on the wrong side of what the state house perceives to be
without its description of professional norm and ethics.
The
President’s Office Media
That is about your statehouse media team; now there are
also bad signs with the team at your office, talking from experience.
With Mutharika, whatever anybody wanted to believe I had
concrete grounds to declare that he, or his lieutenants, was always trying to
manipulate the media to set his agendas in motion.
While we still lamented for government’s contribution or
lack of it in delaying the adoption of the much talked about Access to
Information Bill by developing cold feet towards its realization, I find all
the sanity to surmise that it is for the same manipulative objective that this
bill is still a pipedream.
You see, whenever I was looking for any information from
the office of His Excellency, whatever or however undemanding that information
may be, I would be told to wait by Mutharika’s all-knowing Press officer.
It was either he was busy in a meeting or he would
promise to get back to the enquiring journalists after finding out from the
president; he rarely did though.
It was understandable considering how sensitive the
position for these media guys at such places is as it thrives on the whims of
the president and things become worse when the occupant of such a seat was very
unpredictable on his bad days as was the case with Mutharika.
But it even became distasteful when the technocrats or
officers in the ministries behave likewise or sometimes just more than the
president’s press office; pretending to be the best custodians of public
information in their domain. This is confidential information protected at the
expense of transparency and accountability.
MACRA
and LICENCES
It is by extension of the same proclivity that you find
bodies like Malawi Communication Regulatory Authority (MACRA) behaving like
politicians. They have flimsy excuse to threaten closure of some broadcasting
stations and worse still refuse to issue licenses to deserving operators.
Just how do you explain how a well established media
house like Blantyre Newspapers Limited (BNL) or Zodiak Broadcasting Station
(ZBS) would be denied licence but president’s tribal grouping Mulhakho wa Lomwe
and his family who have never done any media business qualifies for a TV and
radio licence. Is this not taking Malawians for granted?
I would be so saddened Madam President when you will
continue refusing the deserving the licenses and end up providing one for the
Joyce Banda Foundation.
Then there is that Spy MACHINE, do you share the reasons
MACRA advanced, justifies its acquisition?
Cleaning
MBC
Then there are state controlled broadcasters, the Malawi
Broadcasting Station (MBC) television and radio stations. You cannot forget how
mere employees of the institution like Bright Malopa and his clique used to
insult you as if you were not their boss.
Madam President, the lesson you learnt from such
behavior should teach you a lesson on why there is need to free the corporation
so that it can act professionally.
If you think what your predecessors were doing is okay, and
then it is unfortunate that Malawi is blessed with leaders of your kind.
Learn to know that it is not an issue when you stretch a
muscle neither is it an issue when you belch or attend a wedding of a relative.
We have no business paying tax to watch you or listen to you doing this on our
television and radios. We hired you right from our villages and therefore you
are a human being connected to these relations first. It is folly to always
follow you with state cameras and microphones when you are visiting Domasi or
Chintheche to cheer up with relatives.
Madam President, MBC has some of the most talented
journalists in the country, but can you see what a circus it became. An
accomplished journalist like Charles Chikapa was thrown out into the doldrums.
Joshua Kambwiri was penalized merely for coming from the same area that you
hail from. Is this the way we are supposed to suppress talent and progress?
This madness has
to stop, and I think it is you who has to give sanity to the way the state
broadcaster is to operate. It will be difficult if you will surround yourself
with praise singers, because they will be blind or deliberately blind to your
shortcomings.
I am in deep doubt that you are any different fro your
predecessors if going by your appointment of Dr. Benson Tembo is anything to go
by.
Here is a man who was in the management of MBC at the
time Dr. Hastings Kamuzu Banda used it as a suppressing tool. Dr. Tembo is the
same person who perpetuated his charge even under President Muluzi when he was
the pioneer head of the then Television Malawi.
You cannot describe how it operated then as
professional. And this is the person you appoint again and knowing how you used
to chastise workers at MBC when you were a cabinet minister for not covering
you enough, I know we are back on the same circumstance for another vicious
cycle.
The most unfortunate thing is that the grassroots are
sensitive to any mistake that you will make and they will give you, your prize
or God will do it on their behalf.
I wish you all the best your Excellency President Joyce
Hilda Mtila Banda.
Yours Sincerely
Vitus-Gregory Gondwe
1 comment:
Perfect advice from abwana Gondwe! I like your article!
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