Essayer OR - Gratuit
Elites indulge as Malawians suffer
Mail & Guardian
|M&G 23 January 2026
If the country is to move beyond crisis management, austerity must apply to all
Shaky ground: What began as concern over Vice-President Jane Ansah's costly overseas trip has evolved into an indictment of executive incoherence and weakened accountability. Photo: Government of Malawi
(Government of Malawi)
As Malawi seeks emergency financial assistance abroad, allegations of high-cost discretionary spending by Malawi’s Vice-President Dr Jane Ansah are testing the country’s governance credibility at home and with international partners.
In the markets of Lilongwe, the signs of economic distress are clear. Vendors sell roasted maize and secondhand clothing while the cost of living continues to rise beyond the reach of most households.
Malawi, a country long dependent on donor support, is once again confronting the limits of an economy under severe strain.
Against this backdrop, Finance Minister Joseph Mwanamvekha has been seeking emergency financial and food assistance from Middle Eastern partners, including Qatar.
The efforts come as the country struggles with food insecurity, foreign exchange shortages and a rapidly depreciating kwacha.
Allegations surrounded a proposed high-cost overseas trip by a senior government official have sparked public debate. Ansah is back now, having left the country in December 2025 amid controversy
Ansah’s return to Malawi on 15 January 2026, has failed to calm what has become the most damaging governance controversy of President Peter Mutharika’s administration, exposing a government unable to speak with one voice and a widening gulf between official austerity rhetoric and elite privilege.
What began as public concern over a costly overseas trip has evolved into a broader indictment of executive incoherence, weakened accountability and the erosion of public trust at a time of deep economic distress.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition M&G 23 January 2026 de Mail & Guardian.
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