News / Africa
New Malawi president sells presidential jet and 60 Mercedes
02 Jun 2012 at 06:42hrs | Views
The president of Malawi Mrs Joyce Banda on Friday announced that the presidential jet and fleet of 60 Mercedes limousines would be sold.
According a UK newspaper "The Telegraph" the British have described the new president's move as an example to other African leaders.
Mrs Banda said "I can well use private airlines. I am already used to hitchhiking."
Mrs Banda, the former vice-president, took over from Bingu wa Mutharika, in April when he suffered a heart attack.. Since then, she has sacked former members of the "old guard" in the cabinet and security services, brought back Malawi's old flag and pledged to lift the country's ban on homosexuality.
Most recently, she followed long-standing International Monetary Fund advice to devalue Malawi's currency by a third.
The move caused panic buying and a sharp rise in the prices of basic foods and fuel.
But her decisions have seen donors including Britain, the EU, Germany, Norway and the World Bank, re-establish warm relations with Malawi.
Mr Mitchell announced that Britain, Malawi's biggest bilateral aid donor, would send a Bank of England expert to help stabilize the currency.
He said that Mrs Banda had sent a signal of her intent and her priorities at a time of financial austerity in Malawi and Britain.
"The importance of an African leader giving up the jets and Mercedes is iconic," he said.
"There are millions of people in need of drugs. I went to a hospital and saw people who were clearly ill queueing for drugs that were not there. We are making pounds 10?million available for Malawi to stock up, and extra funding for agriculture, education and health to reinforce the work of this very good president."
Steve Sharra, a prominent Malawian blogger, said Mrs Banda's actions were broadly welcomed by her countrymen.
Critics joked, however, that Malawi was transforming from a "God-fearing country" to a "donor-fearing country".
"The currency devaluation has been hard but I think most people understood why it had to happen and she is enjoying extraordinary amounts of goodwill and trust among Malawians," he said. "All presidents start out well and we will have to see how she behaves after she is re-elected but for me, what's important is that she consults before taking decisions.
"With President Mutharika, it was his way or the highway."
The former president's profligacy provoked a Whitehall decision to suspend aid to Malawi last year.
In 2010, he was accused of using public money to build new roads to travel in comfort to his second wedding.
The same year, he unveiled a multi-million-dollar Taj Mahal-style mausoleum in memory of his late wife Ethel.
Mr Mutharika had defended the purchase of the jet as a "must" for a national leader in 2009.
"The jet that I purchased is not mine. It belongs to the nation," he claimed. "It will be used by 10, 11 other people coming after me. So that's an asset."
According a UK newspaper "The Telegraph" the British have described the new president's move as an example to other African leaders.
Mrs Banda said "I can well use private airlines. I am already used to hitchhiking."
Mrs Banda, the former vice-president, took over from Bingu wa Mutharika, in April when he suffered a heart attack.. Since then, she has sacked former members of the "old guard" in the cabinet and security services, brought back Malawi's old flag and pledged to lift the country's ban on homosexuality.
Most recently, she followed long-standing International Monetary Fund advice to devalue Malawi's currency by a third.
The move caused panic buying and a sharp rise in the prices of basic foods and fuel.
But her decisions have seen donors including Britain, the EU, Germany, Norway and the World Bank, re-establish warm relations with Malawi.
Mr Mitchell announced that Britain, Malawi's biggest bilateral aid donor, would send a Bank of England expert to help stabilize the currency.
He said that Mrs Banda had sent a signal of her intent and her priorities at a time of financial austerity in Malawi and Britain.
"The importance of an African leader giving up the jets and Mercedes is iconic," he said.
"There are millions of people in need of drugs. I went to a hospital and saw people who were clearly ill queueing for drugs that were not there. We are making pounds 10?million available for Malawi to stock up, and extra funding for agriculture, education and health to reinforce the work of this very good president."
Steve Sharra, a prominent Malawian blogger, said Mrs Banda's actions were broadly welcomed by her countrymen.
Critics joked, however, that Malawi was transforming from a "God-fearing country" to a "donor-fearing country".
"The currency devaluation has been hard but I think most people understood why it had to happen and she is enjoying extraordinary amounts of goodwill and trust among Malawians," he said. "All presidents start out well and we will have to see how she behaves after she is re-elected but for me, what's important is that she consults before taking decisions.
"With President Mutharika, it was his way or the highway."
The former president's profligacy provoked a Whitehall decision to suspend aid to Malawi last year.
In 2010, he was accused of using public money to build new roads to travel in comfort to his second wedding.
The same year, he unveiled a multi-million-dollar Taj Mahal-style mausoleum in memory of his late wife Ethel.
Mr Mutharika had defended the purchase of the jet as a "must" for a national leader in 2009.
"The jet that I purchased is not mine. It belongs to the nation," he claimed. "It will be used by 10, 11 other people coming after me. So that's an asset."
Source - Telegraph