Tatizo la Dr. Joyce Banda aliwapuuza SADC, awa jamaa ukiwapuuza lazima ung'oke madarakani, anyway easy coming easy going, ajipange kwa maisha ya uraiani.
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------Original message------
From: Charles Banda <chasbanda@gmail.com>
To: <wanabidii@googlegroups.com>
Date: Tuesday, June 3, 2014 2:33:52 AM GMT-0700
Subject: Re: [wanabidii] Re: MALAWI ELECTIONS 2014 - UCHAGUZI MKUU WA MALAWI 2014
Please find below results for Presidential, Parliamentary and Local
Government Elections
Final presidential results statement
<https://malawielections2014.files.wordpress.com/2014/06/final-presidential-results-statment.pdf>
Statement – Parliamentary and LGE Results
<https://malawielections2014.files.wordpress.com/2014/06/20140602-statement-parliamentary-and-lge-results.pdf>
Analysis of Final Results – Parliamentary Election 2014
<https://malawielections2014.files.wordpress.com/2014/06/analysis-of-final-results-pariamentary-election-2014.pdf>
2014 Local Government Elections Results
<https://malawielections2014.files.wordpress.com/2014/06/2014-local-government-elections-results.pdf>
On Monday, June 2, 2014 6:35:42 PM UTC+3, Charles Banda wrote:
>
> PRESIDENT PETER MUTHARIKA INAUGURAL SPEECH
>
> INTRODUCTION
>
> First of all, I would like to extend a special welcome to Your
> Excellencies and distinguished guests who have travelled from various
> countries to witness this momentous occasion. I thank you all for coming to
> Malawi and it is a great honour to have you here. Your presence is a source
> of inspiration to us and a demonstration of the confidence and trust that
> you have in our young democracy.
>
> My fellow Malawians, I feel greatly humbled today to be inaugurated as the
> fifth President of Malawi. A country known for Peace and Calm, Law and
> Order. A country known for its hard working citizens. A country known for
> its political tolerance. A country that is safe from internal and external
> enemies.
>
> Today, we begin another leg of 50 years. My fellow Malawians, the next 50
> years of our journey presents us with an opportunity to reset our
> priorities, rethink our strategic focus, redefine Malawi, and make it
> progressive.
>
> Today, we have people from the North, South, Centre and East to inaugurate
> a new era. During the 2014 Tripartite Elections, Malawians went to the
> polls to vote for change, and change they voted for a better Malawi. Today
> I stand before you to offer you, with your help a very distinct possibility
> of the future in our hands. Change has come to Malawi. Yes, our vote for
> change was not easy, you voted for change and victory belongs to us all.
>
> UNITY OF PURPOSE
>
> My fellow Malawians, this is not time to rest; this is not time for
> vengeance; this is time to build our great Republic into the force for good
> that we can be. This is time for Malawi to be strong again. Strong against
> marginalization, strong against poverty and disease, strong against fraud
> and greed, strong against weakness and fear.
>
> Let us pick up the pieces. The journey has just begun. We must strive for
> unity of purpose, oneness of vision. We may belong to different political
> parties, but we belong to one nation. We voted for different parties, but
> we all voted for development.
>
> It is now time to share our common development agenda. It is time to share
> what binds us as Malawians. It is time to show the World that we may differ
> in ideology, but we stand together as Malawians. That we shall develop this
> nation together. That we shall defend, if need be, this motherland
> together. We may share a divided past, but we share a common future. We may
> come from different origins, but we are heading towards the same
> destination. We share a common destiny.
>
> My fellow Malawians, today we embark on a long journey of hope,
> patriotism, security, passion for country and pride to be Malawian once
> more. And we have come on a long journey.
>
> OUR FUTURE, OUR DESTINY
>
> Fellow Malawians, every fifty years has brought a new era in our history.
> One hundred and fifty years ago, in 1864, the first European missionaries
> began the idea of creation of Nyasaland. This is the moment that began to
> unite tribes of the land. One hundred years ago, in 1914, a great World War
> began and ignited the spirit of independence in the dreams of our
> forefathers. These forefathers faced a global super power with conviction
> and courage. My fellow Malawians, we face similar challenges today.
>
> Fifty years ago, in 1964, Malawi was born when we became politically
> independent. Today, in 2014, we inaugurate the rebirth of our nation. We
> inaugurate the lost dreams of our forefathers and fallen heroes. We
> inaugurate the spirit of economic independence. We re-launch a new, better,
> stronger, proud nation once more.
>
> The pursuit of our dreams knows no limits, no boundaries, no skies. Our
> only problem is the way we think. The only barrier to our national
> achievement is our Belief in others at our expense.
>
> My fellow Malawians, We know that no nation was created poor by God. No
> nation has license to bury its naturally endowed treasure: No country can
> call itself poor.
>
> Today, my fellow country men and women, we declare ourselves ready for the
> next fifty years. Today we get new faith and belief in ourselves. Today we
> begin the road to a coherent nation of achievers.
>
> My fellow Malawians, the first years of the DPP in government restored
> faith in ourselves. We proved that it is possible for Malawi to be the
> second highest growing economy in the world. We proved that it is possible
> to grow abundant food and make prices more affordable. We may not have done
> some things well. But we have learnt our lessons, great lessons. We pledge
> to do better, to do more, and to live the lessons of the years.
>
> Our first task is to create a proper economic, political and democratic
> system. Our task is to re-create an environment that gives our people hope
> and belief once more.
>
> SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC SERVICES
>
> Security for our businesses and homes is key to sustainable national
> development. We intend to restore Peace and Calm, Law and Order. I intend
> to over- see a Malawi that has good road networks within the townships we
> live, a Malawi that does not victimize its professional civil servants
> simply because of change of Government. A Malawi which has clean cities,
> functional street lights, viable public transport, visible infrastructure,
> good housing for our Police and Army, strong security, jobs for our youth
> and college education for everyone who passes at Malawi School Certificate
> of Education.
>
> We must be a country where critical dialogue prevails for our collective
> participation in the pursuit of socio-economic development. I am therefore
> looking forward to leading a listening government. It is only with a
> listening government that citizens participate because people feel valued
> whenever we listen to them.
> My fellow Malawians, I intend to actively involve the youth in my
> Administration. We need the Youth to participate. The Youth are the energy
> that drives any country, any vision, any dream. It is on their shoulders
> that we must delve away from the shackles of non- performance of the last
> few years. It is to them that I call upon to meaningfully move into small
> and medium enterprises, to get an education, to do something for themselves
> every day, to look up with pride and energy and help me transform our
> cities into clean places, help me defend our borders, help me move Malawi
> to a major force for good in this part of Africa.
>
> We need women to participate in our development agenda. They are the ones
> that build the fabric of society. Women have always been at the core of the
> economic fabric of the African society. No society, and no economic system
> can do without women. My Administration intends to work with all women in
> utilising all of its human resource to develop this country in the shortest
> period possible.
>
> NATIONAL RECONCILITAION
>
> We need collective participation in development. That is why I have
> extended a hand of RECONCILIATION to my colleagues who contested for this
> highest office. I offer them a new way of doing politics in Malawi:
> Respect, Consultation, Integrity and Honesty. I offer them a progressive
> way of doing politics which should not push us asunder, but rather bring us
> together. Together we can do more for each other. Together we can do more
> for our communities. Together we can do more for our country.
> My fellow Malawians, TODAY, we must begin to put interests of Country
> First before our own. And you do not need to be in government in order to
> love, serve and develop your country. I want you to spend one minute
> greeting those next to you, promising them that from now on You will put
> the interest of Malawi First above personal interest.
>
> My fellow Malawians, these contestants are great and patriotic sons and
> daughters of the land. We were all fighting for the same thing - passion
> for a new direction, a transformational Leader for genuine change, we all
> shared those sentiments during the debates, We still share that common
> purpose to heal our country.
>
> You voted for me because you saw that what we need as a Country is not
> vengeance and pretence but a transformational leader who would take this
> country to greater heights. Greater heights, indeed I promise you.
>
> You saw just as I did that what we need is a unity of purpose to transform
> our country to a middle income country; capable of producing and exporting
> once more. You saw that what we need is development. My fellow Malawians,
> today we begin that journey, TOGETHER!
>
> My fellow Malawians I swore to defend and protect the Constitution of
> Malawi and uphold the rule of law. This I will do. But let me make one
> thing clear. The law must be left alone to do its work whenever crime is
> committed. We should never again arrest anyone and hunt for the crime
> later. We should never again punish those we don't like because they hold a
> political view different from ours. The age of using state instruments of
> justice to deal with our political opponents is gone. Let us not confuse
> the pursuit of justice with political vendettas.
>
> RULE OF LAW
>
> Fellow Malawians, in the last 12 months or so, there were a number of
> crimes committed against the State for example the infamous cashgate
> scandal. I wish to state that the cashgate investigations which Her
> Excellency Dr Joyce Banda started will be pursued and concluded justly.
>
> Malawians are waiting to know who did what. Malawians need their plundered
> resources paid back. Malawians need justice delivered and no one should
> blackmail the state by saying this is witch-hunting.
> The Police, the Anti-Corruption Bureau the Directorate of Public
> Prosecution and other security and law enforcement agencies are from this
> day free to operate independently but, professionally.
>
> We will fully arm the Anti-Corruption Bureau with human and financial
> capacity to do its job without the interference of the executive.
>
> In service to the nation, I will not tolerate one day more if a Cabinet
> Minister or civil servant takes what does not belong to them. Next time you
> see a cabinet minister arrested, do not be surprised. My cabinet shall live
> up to this principle of being accountable to the people.
>
> I want this message to be very clear even before I appoint my cabinet. If
> what anyone wants is to become rich instead of serving Malawians, then do
> not come into my cabinet. When I appoint you, please just say 'No'! Today,
> I hereby draw a red line against corruption, theft of public funds, and I
> am prepared to draw this red line with my blood.
>
> Today, we are launching a government that must be accountable to the
> people. The central principle of democracy is that everyone must be
> accountable to someone else. The rule of law follows to ensure that we are
> all accountable to the people and the law.
>
> We cannot afford to waste time with plundering public resources. We have
> urgent work to do. As I have said, our country is on the edge of
> collapsing. This country is dying. Organs of government departments are in
> a state of paralysis. The veins of the economy in the private sector and
> businesses are paralysed. The cost of living is no longer affordable by
> many anymore. We cannot even afford to heal those in pain because there is
> no medicine in our hospitals. It is time to get this country functioning
> again. And we have no time to waste.
>
> We shall protect the public purse because we need to provide adequate
> public services. These include quality health care to all Malawians,
> quality education, good infrastructure and investing in the creation of
> jobs. We need to invest in the creation of an efficient, motivated,
> results-oriented civil service which will be the catalyst for the creation
> of wealth. Our manifesto has promised to create new wealth, and we need a
> motivated and performing civil service to deliver our policies to the
> people.
>
> MEDIA AND PUBLIC INFORMATION
>
> Our administration will ensure that there is access to public information
> and in this regard we shall cooperate with all relevant stakeholders
> including the media in passing and implementation of the Access to
> Information Bill into law.
>
> We will allow the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation operate in an open, free
> and fair manner, make independent editorial decisions and I don't want my
> Minister of Information to interfere in their work. This is a promise I
> make to Malawi.
>
> The era of using the Public Broadcaster for Political mileage is gone. The
> era of intransigence through use of the public broadcaster is gone.
>
> PUBLIC SERVICE
>
> There is no more doing business as usual. For the first time, we shall now
> have a central and local government. This will be the government of the
> people. From this year, the politics of development has changed. With the
> arrival of the ward councillors, government has come to your doorstep. I
> welcome all ward councillors, irrespective of your political party into the
> fold of government. You are part of the government of the people. And to
> you the people, make sure we do your will, provided it is the right will.
> And I invite the media to ensure that we deliver our promises.
>
> At central government, we shall keep our promise to maintain a lean,
> disciplined and efficient cabinet of 20 members. Other new measures include
> reorganising our ministries for more efficiency. The new measures we bring
> include elevating the Ministry of Labour to a key ministry in my
> government. For us, Ministry of Labour is the engine-room for creating
> jobs. We must create jobs for the youth and everyone capable.
>
> We will implement stern cost-cutting measures. This will include the
> President working in the office more than on the road. Yes, I will come
> around to visit you on state functions. But do not ask me to travel around
> aimlessly and spend your state resources. I will empower all relevant
> officials in the public service to do their work as they are mandated.
>
> ECONOMIC GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT
>
> But first, we will see to it that the economy begins to grow again. And we
> plan to take a "bottom-up" approach that involves and directly benefits
> ordinary people. And we plan to deliver a people centred economic growth at
> the rate of 7.5% in the next five years.
>
> What you need is not your President being all over, but it is
> infrastructure development coming all over and wherever you are. Our plans
> are to build a new network of first class roads across Malawi. We need open
> up our rural centres to the main roads and cities of our country so that
> rural areas have tarmac road access to the rest of the country. We plan to
> build more rural growth centres so that we can take development to the
> people.
>
> The DPP has already planned some of these projects. We started some of
> these projects before and we want to continue and do even more.
>
> We will revive Malawi's colourful dreams of Nsanje port and building new
> cities.
>
> FOOD SECURITY
>
> We plan to ensure that every Malawian can afford adequate food, a descent
> house, and a dignified means of earning a living.
>
> You did not vote for maize in vain. We want to make fertiliser subsidy
> available to all subsistence maize farmers. We shall continue to grow
> surplus food to bring down the cost of living. And we shall revive the
> Green Belt initiative to make Malawi the breadbasket of Africa.
>
> EDUCATION
>
> It is time to revive an education system that empowers the youth in
> technical and productive skills as well as train them on how best to run
> their businesses. That is why we will introduce Community Colleges to
> empower the youth of this country to start creating their own wealth. This
> robust entrepreneurship education will also create a new middle class which
> has been missing since we received independence 50 years ago.
>
> Our education programme also includes rehabilitating and expand existing
> universities while building and opening five new universities in Mzimba,
> Nkhotakota, Mangochi and Nsanje. And the forgotten MUST in Thyolo needs to
> properly open with high calibre internationally recognised scholars as soon
> as we get settled.
>
> SOCIAL WELFARE
>
> My fellow Malawians, is a Malawi without grass thatched houses possible?
> Yes it is.
> We promised to subsidise iron sheets and cement and we are going to do
> just that. This policy will make construction easy and revive the
> construction industry.
>
> A vibrant construction industry resuscitates the economy. A vibrant
> construction industry creates jobs for everyone, and it creates business
> for all sectors. We want to make construction easy because every Malawian
> wants to afford to sleep in a descent place.
>
> Our street vendors, our tomato growers and our civil servants should be
> able to build houses for our mothers and fathers across those rivers, hills
> and villages where we all come from. And one day, we will travel this
> country and see development with our eyes everywhere.
>
> SECURITY
>
> As we begin a new era today, we commit ourselves to provide Malawians with
> "Total Security" so that every individual, our children, our property and
> businesses are safe. We must live in a country where we all feel safe.
> INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
>
> This country lives in a global community and it is no longer possible to
> think as if we are an island. We need development partners from the West
> and the East equally, North and South alike. Let it be known that Malawi
> will strive to be a friend to everyone in the global community. Even as we
> protect and uphold our sovereignty, we need each other as humankind in a
> common global community.
> Malawi will continue being a good and trusted partner on the international
> scene.
> We remain committed to the ideals of SADC, COMESA, African Union, the UN
> and other International Organisations where Malawi is a member.
>
> CONCLUSION
>
> In conclusion allow me to say that we voted for the rebirth of our country
> and a new beginning. We voted because we believe in the best of Malawi.
> Today, we have gathered with our feet here because we are ready to walk the
> new beginning. In every house of our communities we have gathered before
> television sets because we want to see the new beginning. Across the
> country, in every village, at every trading centre, in every shop and every
> house, and at every veranda, we have glued our ears to our radios because
> we want to hear that we have begun a new beginning. Because this is a new
> beginning we must walk together.
>
> This is the will of the people. May the will of the people prevail as we
> move forward as one nation, one country, one destiny! And may God grant us
> the courage to change the things we can, the serenity to discern the things
> we cannot change, and the wisdom to know the difference.
>
> We have this day consecrated our nation to walk the path of progress. Our
> future is for us all, and we need to work for it. No nation can live for
> us. No country can develop our country for us. So, let each one of us go
> and work hard knowing that we have a government that will see to it that we
> earn as we labour. No food for lazy man. Let us all go and roll up our
> sleeves and be productive with our lives.
>
> My fellow Malawians, I want to thank our development partners our
> neighbours for being with us at all times.
>
> And I thank Malawians for the spirited fight for our country to be where
> we are today.
>
> May God bless our beloved country. May God bless you all.
>
> Thank you!
>
> On Monday, June 2, 2014 7:50:02 AM UTC+3, Charles Banda wrote:
>
> "SINDIKHALA NAWO KU INAUGURATION YA A MUTHARIKA" - JOYCE BANDA
>
> Former President, Joyce Banda, has said that she will not be available at
> the inauguration of Peter Mutharika as State President because she is
> committed with other things
>
>
> On Sunday, June 1, 2014 2:57:25 PM UTC+3, Charles Banda wrote:
>
> MCP PRESIDENT LAZARUS CHAKWERA HAS MADE THIS STATEMENT
>
> Fellow Malawians; Today at 6.15am, I called the President-elect, Prof.
> Arthur Peter Mutharika, who has since been sworn in as the 5th President of
> the Republic of Malawi. I called to congratulate him and to wish him well.
>
> As you all know we had been given a hearing at the High Court in Blantyre
> yesterday. Three issues were presented for determination by the Court:-
>
> 1. Whether the injunction that had been obtained by Hon. Friday Jumbe
> preventing MEC from conducting a recount was valid. The court ordered that
> the injunction was wrongly obtained and discharged the injunction.
> 2. The court was asked to rule whether MEC had the power to order a
> recount and the court decided that MEC had the power to do anything that it
> needs to do to arrive at a free and fair result and that includes a recount
> of ballots.
> 3. On whether MEC could postpone the announcement of results beyond the 8
> days period the court ruled that the 8 day period ought to be reviewed
> because it can lead to injustice.
>
> The court lamented the predicament it found itself in but nonetheless said
> the period of 8 days could not be extended. We thus found ourselves in a
> situation where the court said a recount which MEC said had to be done to
> arrive at a credible result had to be done in one and half hours. In making
> the announcement the Chairman of MEC stated that "some of the Commissioners
> of MEC had expressed reservations at some of the results as received by
> MEC" but stated that the due process that had been followed did not allow
> them to satisfy themselves by way of a recount.
>
> He stated that the rule of law compelled them to announce the results and
> as Commissioners they had to obey the law. We are aware that it was not
> just some of the Commissioners but the majority, seven out of ten that
> expressed reservations at the determination.
>
> In fact the 7 Commissioners issued a communique to the effect that they
> could not make a determination without a recount of the ballots of the
> Presidential Vote. We find ourselves therefore in a position where on MEC's
> own admission the result of Presidential
> vote is flawed but they are compelled to
> announce it and on that basis the President of Malawi declared. This is a
> very sad situation where our democracy
> and the will of the people of Malawi are held to ransom by virtue of some
> technical phrase of law that says the result must be given in 8 days
> regardless of glaring fraud and irregularities. We are aware that the
> result announced yesterday can be challenged and in fact it ought to be
> challenged but to what effect and for what benefit to the Malawian people.
> The institutions put in place to safeguard our democracy, MEC and the
> Judiciary, have confirmed their inadequacies. We have always believed that
> to every wrong there must be a remedy but our experiences since May 20 tell
> us otherwise. It is therefore with the heaviest of hearts that I wish to
> thank all the supporters of the MCP and all people of good will who
> supported our cause, in cash, counsel and prayers. It was and remains a
> good cause.
>
> In eight months we ran a formidable campaign that gave hope to many
> Malawians that a truly transformative development agenda was possible. We
> stuck to our values. And we have no regrets.
>
> Are we disappointed?? Yes!!
>
> Are we discouraged?? No!!
>
> We believe we did not lose. The systems failed us and all this happened in
> full view of all Malawians and the world. And we believe that Malawians
> would still have loved to know what really happened. We now bow to the
> reality of the present situation and say let us move on. Let us keep peace.
> There
> can only be one President at a time. It is my hope that when history comes
> to judge me, the Chakwera campaign and what happened in this election
> pertaining to the declaration of the
> Presidential winner it will judge us kindly.
>
> We congratulate and wish the new President well.
>
> We pray for him and our country and may God continue to bless Malawi and
> keep it a land of peace.
> <p
> style="margin-top:6px;margin-bottom:0px;display:inline;color:rgb(20,24,35);font-family:Helvetic
>
> ...
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