The Herald (South Africa)

Malawi reruns election in test case for African democracy

- Frank Phiri

Malawians queued up to vote yesterday in a rerun of a discredite­d poll that has become a test case for the ability of African courts to tackle vote fraud and restrain presidenti­al power.

Malawi’s judiciary infuriated President Peter Mutharika, in power since 2014, when it overturned his narrow victory in February over “systematic and grave” irregulari­ties.

His disputed win also sparked popular anger, leading to months of anti-government protests, a rare sight in Malawi.

Last week, hundreds of lawyers also protested against interferen­ce with the judiciary when Mutharika tried to retire chief justice Andrew Nyirenda, forcing the president to back down.

The supreme court upheld the decision last month, which Mutharika, 79, called a “coup” in a campaign rally on Saturday in the northern district of Rumphi.

“I’m glad to vote again. This time I pray, that my vote will count,” said Bernado Simbi, 36, a domestic security guard after voting for Mutharika in a school near Chileka Airport, north of the commercial capital Blantyre.

The judiciary’s ruling echoed one by a Kenyan court in 2017, which cancelled President Uhuru Kenyatta’s election win.

Both were remarkable on a continent in which judges often serve as a rubber stamp to executive power.

The vote looks too close to call. Malawi has since ditched its first-past-the-post system so the winner has to get more than 50%.

In the May poll last year, Mutharika got 38.57%, three percentage points more than opposition leader Lazarus Chakwera, and fewer than 10 points ahead of a third candidate, Deputy President Saulos Chilima.

The 47-year-old Chilima has now backed Chakwera, 64, which would give them a majority if they can combine their previous votes.

Mutharika’s Democratic Progressiv­e Party is in an alliance with the southern African nation’s ex-ruling party, the United Democratic Front, which obtained less than 5% last time.

Lying on a lake at the southern tip of the Great Rift Valley, about half of Malawi’s predominan­tly farming population live in poverty. Its main exports are tobacco and tea.

“I must continue what I started ... to end poverty and develop Malawi,” Mutharika said on Saturday.

The former law professor has revamped Malawi’s roads and boosted electricit­y while also taming inflation.

Yet critics accuse him of doing little to tackle corruption.

“The government has lost the anti-corruption fight [and] the opposition has taken advantage,“Happy Kayuni, political science lecturer at Malawi University, said.

Chakwera has made graft a central pillar of his campaigns.

 ?? Picture: AMOS GUMULIRA/AFP ?? STRENGTH IN NUMBERS: Supporters of Malawi’s main opposition Malawi Congress Party hold dummy ballot papers at Mtandire locations in the suburb of the capital, Lilongwe
Picture: AMOS GUMULIRA/AFP STRENGTH IN NUMBERS: Supporters of Malawi’s main opposition Malawi Congress Party hold dummy ballot papers at Mtandire locations in the suburb of the capital, Lilongwe

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