The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Malawi President launches re-election campaign

-

LILONGWE, Malawi: Malawi’s President Peter Mutharika launched his Democratic Progressiv­e Party’s manifesto and election campaign Sunday, ahead of next month’s elections where he will seek a second and final term in office.

Mutharika, who has been in power since 2014, will face tough opposition, including from his own deputy Saulos Chilima, at the May 21 election.

“This is the most important campaign since 1994 when Malawi attained multi-party democracy,” Mutharika told over 5,000 supporters at the Kamuzu Institute of Youth in Lilongwe.

“This year we choose between going forward or going backwards.”

His government has been dogged by several high-profile cases of corruption and nepotism.

Last November, Mutharika himself was forced to return a 200,000 donation from a businessma­n facing a corruption case in a 3-million contract to supply food to the Malawi police.

But on Sunday he told his supporters: “In 2014, we made

This is the most important campaign since 1994 when Malawi attained multi-party democracy. Peter Mutharika, Malawi President

promises and kept the promises.

“We are government that has done more in the last five years than any government has done in the history of Malawi.

“We are ready to take Malawi further from poverty to prosperity ,” he told the jubilant crowd.

And he held his hand out to the opposition, calling on them to “just come and join us so that we build together, because they are not presenting any new ideas”.

Mutharika, 78, defeated the incumbent Joyce Banda in the 2014 presidenti­al elections. Next month, he faces three challenger­s, including his own Vice President Chilima.

Chilima, 48, quit Mutharika’s party to form the United Transforma­tion Movement, while staying on as vice president. Under Malawi law, the president cannot fire the vice president.

The other two contenders are Lazarus Chakwera, head of the main opposition Malawi Congress Party (MCP); and Atupele Muluzi, health minister in Mutharika’s government.

Former baptist preacher Chakwera, 64, is running with the support of former president Banda.

Atupele Muluzi, 41, who launched his party’s manifesto in Lilongwe on Sunday, inherited the United Democratic Front from his father, Malawi’s third president Bakili Muluzi.

The party entered into a parliament­ary alliance with the president’ s party after Mu l uzi came fourth in the 2014 elections.

About half of Malawi’s 18 million population live below the poverty line, according to the World Bank, and the country relies on foreign aid.

Food shortages, power outages and ballooning external debt have hurt Mutharika’s popularity ahead of the vote. — AFP

 ??  ?? Youths carry posters depicting the contents of the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party’s (DPP) manifesto during the official launch of its election campaign led by Malawi’s President at Kamuzu Institute for Sports in Malawi’s capital Lilongwe, ahead of next month’s elections. — AFP photo
Youths carry posters depicting the contents of the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party’s (DPP) manifesto during the official launch of its election campaign led by Malawi’s President at Kamuzu Institute for Sports in Malawi’s capital Lilongwe, ahead of next month’s elections. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia