Malawi polls yesterday opened after a closely fought election campaign, with Malawian President Peter Mutharika battling to hold off two serious rivals in a race that has focused on corruption allegations and economic development.
Mutharika, who has been in power since 2014, faces opposition from his own deputy Saulos Chilima and former Baptist preacher Lazarus Chakwera.
“We have set Malawi on the path of progress,” Mutharika, 78, told several thousand cheering supporters of his ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) at his final campaign rally over the weekend.
Photo: AFP
His bid for a second term has highlighted on the economy and his record of improving road and electricity infrastructure across the southeastern African country.
Under Mutharika, inflation has fallen from 23 percent to below 9 percent, but still only 11 percent of the population has access to electricity.
The election is the first since a new law forced parties to declare large donations and banned the once-common practice by candidates of giving cash handouts.
“I’m hoping for change. We need jobs to change our lives and that is what I hope my candidate does,” motor mechanic Madalitso Willie, 25, told reporters, without sharing who he voted for.
“We have been disappointed so many times before, but now we want something different,” said businesswoman Violet Moyo, 30, as she waited to vote after polls opened at 6am. “I’m super excited for voting.”
Food shortages, power outages and ballooning external debt have hurt Mutharika’s popularity while in office.
He faces a strong challenge from Chakwera, leader of the main opposition Malawi Congress Party, who came a narrow second in the 2014 election.
As campaigning ended, Chakwera told reporters that he expected “nothing less than victory — we are winning.”
Mutharika’s other opponent, Chilima, last year quit the ruling party to form the youth-focused United Transformation Movement, while staying on as vice president.
Under Malawi law, the president cannot fire the vice president.
Chilima, 46, emphasized his youth credentials by doing push-ups on stage during the campaign, while his wife releases a popular rap video extolling his credentials to be president.
More than half of the 6.8 million registered voters are under 35.
University of Malawi politics professor Dan Banik said that the election posed many questions.
“What will happen when a winner is declared by a narrow margin?” he said. “How will losing presidential candidates take defeat? Will supporters of the incumbent DPP peacefully accept losing?”
The election commission and the courts could be severely tested by counting complaints after polling day, when voters also choose lawmakers and local councilors, Banik said.
In Malawi’s “winner takes all” system, Mutharika won in 2014 with just 36 percent of the vote.
He came to power in the aid-dependent country vowing to tackle corruption after the “Cashgate” scandal erupted a year earlier, revealing massive looting from state coffers, but his government has been dogged by several high-profile cases of corruption and nepotism.
Malawi won independence from Britain in 1964 and was then ruled by Hastings Banda as a one-party state until the first multi-party elections in 1994.
The country, which has a population of 18 million people, has 1 million adults living with HIV — one of the highest HIV prevalence rates in the world.
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