The Scotsman

Democracy moves slowly as China steals a march

Colourful cloth so redolent of sub- Saharan Africa is now often made in China, writes Susan Dalgety

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Patience is a necessity, if not a virtue, here in Malawi. Phlegmatic queues are the order of the day, whether in an Airtel shop, waiting for 20 minutes to buy a voucher for internet access, or at the not- so fast food outlet, where chips can take an inordinate­ly long time to fry.

No- one seems to mind, not even congenital­ly impatient souls like myself. Waiting is a way of life. Waiting for the rains to give life to the maize. Waiting for an internatio­nal NGO to build a bore- hole in a village. Waiting to find out who will lead the country for the next five years. Waiting.

Malawi went to the polls on Tuesday, 21 May. As I write, on Friday morning, the final result has still to be declared. Dr Jane Ansah, chair

Scotland and Malawi share a unique bond stretching back 160 years to Dr David Livingston­e. Scotsman columnist Susan Dalgety has moved to Malawi for six months where she will write a book about the small African nation. The Spirit of Malawi will be published next year, 15 years after Scotland and Malawi signed a co- operation agreement. In her column she will share stories about daily life in Malawi as well those of the many Scots who are today making a positive impact in the country dubbed the Warm Heart of Africa. person of the Malawi Electoral Commission ( MEC), has become something of a folk hero. Her twice daily updates on live television are eagerly awaited by a nation desperate for news.

None more so than her scheduled 9pm broadcast on Thursday night. “This is it,” said everyone, “the result is about to be declared.”

Except it wasn’t. Several complaints about the voting process had been lodged, from accusation­s of vote- rigging to tally sheets not adding up.

“We have to dedicate a great deal of our time to address alleged irregulari­ties and to investigat­e and resolve some of these complaints according to the Commission’s mandate to ensure that the results brought to you are accurate,” declared Dr Ansah. “I appeal to my fellow Malawians to exercise patience …” and with that she was gone, leaving an expectant nation waiting. The next update is in a few hours’ time, and I suspect we will learn that the sitting President, Professor Arthur Peter Mutharika, will have scraped back in for another five years.

His strategy of focusing on his base, the millions of rural poor, seems to have paid off, much to the frustratio­n of urban Malawians crying out for change.

Their desperatio­n is understand­able. Malawi is one of the poorest countries in the world. A respected American publicatio­n, Global Finance Magazine, declared last month that it was the fourth poorest, worse off even than countries such as Mozambique, South Sudan and Liberia which have endured terrible conflict in recent years.

Malawi’s continued poverty confounds many developmen­t experts. The country is peaceful, the land fertile, and its people hard- working. Internatio­nal donors, including the UK and Scottish government­s, invest around £ 1.2 billion a year in aid, ranging from humanitari­an aid at times of crisis, such as the recent floods, to longer- term interventi­ons in health, education and climate change.

There is support for anti- corruption work, private sector developmen­t and tackling HIV/ Aids. There are plentiful five- year plans, national and local, linked to the UN’S Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

Conference­s and workshops abound, and yet for the overwhelmi­ng majority of Malawians, the millions living in rural villages hidden in the country’s interior, miles from the main roads, life is essentiall­y unchanged since before colonialis­m. There have been some notable successes, however. Malawi has one of the highest prevalence­s of HIV in the world, with one million people affected, nearly 10 per cent of the adult population. But it has made remarkable progress in tacking the epidemic and is on track to achieve UNAIDS’S 90- 90- 90 target by next year. This means that 90 per cent of people with HIV will know their status, 90 per cent will get anti- retro viral treatment ( ARVS) and 90 per cent of those on ARVS will be well.

Quite an achievemen­t for a country that causes many people to shrug and say: “Oh Malawi, what can be done?”

Standing in one of Malawi’s oldest fabric shops earlier this week, the scale of the challenges facing the country became chillingly clear. I was with Debra, an old friend and an accomplish­ed dressmaker, eager to choose fabric for some summer dresses.

“The Malawian fabric is poor quality,” said the shop- owner, “You need Kenyan or Nigerian cloth, but the real stuff is hard to get,” he added, shrugging with obvious boredom at yet another white woman looking for “authentici­ty”.

Twenty minutes later, in the heat of the market across the road, I found out why “the real stuff ” is hard to get. The colourful cotton fabric that is so redolent of sub- Saharan Africa now comes stamped “Made in China”.

Chinese “real- fake” African cloth has flooded the market, both in East and West Africa, and the chitenjes worn by women everywhere across Malawi are now more likely to have been manufactur­ed 6,000 miles away in China than in Malawi or Tanzania.

Chinese influence is everywhere in Malawi. The new national parliament building, opened in 2010, was financed by a grant from the Chinese government and built by a Chinese constructi­on firm. As was the national football stadium, opened in 2017, the new road in the north of the country, from Karonga to Chitipa, and several luxury hotels.

Chinese shops, which sell everything from penis- enlarging gel for men (“last longer, larger size” boasts the garish packaging) to fake Louis Vuitton handbags, have sprung up, distorting the traditiona­l retail market dominated by Asian- Malawians. And last September, at a conference in Beijing, China’s leader- for- life, President Xi Jinping, promised 40 African countries, including Malawi, a share of $ 60 billion in aid and loans over the next three years.

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 ??  ?? 0 A woman casts her vote at Masasa Primary School polling station in Mzuzu
0 A woman casts her vote at Masasa Primary School polling station in Mzuzu

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