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Mutharika re elected as Malawi’s President

Mutharika re elected as Malawi’s President

Malawi’s president Peter Mutharika has been declared the winner in a close election which ended up in court after the opposition claimed there have been incidents of vote manipulation.

Mutharika won with 1.9 million votes representing 38.57%, according to the Malawi Electoral Commission, narrowly ahead of Malawi Congress Party ‘s Lazarus Chakwera who came second just like in the last election back in 2014. Chakwera got 1.8 million votes representing 35.41%.

Saluos Chilima a former Airtel executive was Mutharika’s deputy in his first term but jumped ship arguing that Mutharika’s adminstration was so corrupt. He formed his own party the United Transformstion Movement (UTM) in a bid to run against his boss and he came third with just over 1 million votes representing 20.24% after campaigning for a period of 9 months only.

Nearly 7 million people registered to vote in an election which was described as the most unpredictable election the country has ever witnessed. About 5 million people turned up for polling. A total of 74,719 votes were declared null and void.

Surprisingly for the first time two notable incidences happened, the first one is that on May 22, a day after Malawians voted, Chakwera warned of alleged attempts to rig the vote, saying his party had conducted its own count which showed that he was ahead. He further warned that attempt to rig elections would turn this country into chaos and he was ready to sacrifice his blood for the sake of Malawians. The other incident is that his party the Malawi Congress Party on May 25, got a court injunction halting the electoral commission in releasing the presidential results arguing that the results were seriously marred. The party wanted a recount in 10 districts where electoral irregularities occurred.

One notable incident was the arrest of a Malawi Electoral Commission official who was allegedly tampering with the result sheets from the constituency’s tally centers which were under him. The official, allegedly, erased some results from the result sheets from the polling centers with correction fluid and inserted other figures.

However the Malawi high court lifted the injunction which gave the electoral commission powers to release the presidential results. “Ladies and Gentlemen, the Commission has thoroughly reviewed all the complaints that were lodged for the presidential election and we declare the presidential elections to be free and fair and these results are the true reflection of the will of the people of Malawi,” said Jane Ansah the chairperson of the commission at the main Tally centre in Blantyre.

The opposition have been claiming that the polls were flawed since the vote counting process began. Chilima and Chakwera are both calling for a fresh election due to the serious electoral irregularities.

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EDITOR’S NOTE

Outlawing Chaos: The Pitfalls of Parliamentary Disruption

In a parliamentary democracy, the legislative house represents the zenith of democratic discourse and decision-making. It is a place where elected officials convene to debate, analyze, and legislate for the benefit of their constituents and the nation at large.

Read more:Outlawing Chaos: The Pitfalls of Parliamentary Disruption