Sowetan

Malawi fires 68 state employees

Money stolen from agricultur­al ministry

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Blantyre – Malawi has fired 68 civil servants for embezzling $2-million (R27-million) in public funds, as the country tries to crack down on corruption that has seen donors withdraw support.

Employees at the agricultur­al ministry have been accused of running a scheme of inflated salaries or payments for nonexisten­t workers between 2012 and 2014.

“Sixty-eight officers have been dismissed and their cases referred to the attorneyge­neral for prosecutio­n,” Osborne Tsoka, the ministry’s spokesman, said in a statement yesterday.

A probe showed most of the money was stolen by accounts personnel at the ministry’s headquarte­rs in Lilongwe and at research stations.

Malawi’s 180 000 civil servants earn an average of about $100 (R1 300) a month, and corruption is widespread in the public sector.

In 2013 several high-ranking officials were implicated in the “Cashgate” scandal, when millions of dollars were stolen from government coffers.

Internatio­nal donors pulled the plug on aid of around $150million after it was revealed that at least $30-million was stolen over one six-month period scrutinise­d by auditors.

Scores of civil servants, politician­s and business people implicated in “Cashgate” are facing criminal charges, though only four have been convicted. –

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