President Arthur Peter Muthari |
Malawian President
Arthur Peter Mutharika is currently facing
a growing corruption scandal ahead of
next year’s election after a leaked report from the country’s anti-graft body
allegedly accused him of fraud.
Civil society groups have
called for Mutharika’s resignation over claims that he and the ruling
Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) received about $195,000 (167,000 euros) from
a contractor supplying food rations to Malawi police.
“The information we have been getting is very clear that the president benefited from that transaction,” Gift Trapence of the Civil Service
Organisations action group told AFP.
“If he does not resign after 14 days, we will take to the streets.”
Mutharika’s spokesman told
local media that the president
had done nothing wrong after the leaked Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) report was
published in newspapers at the weekend.
ACB director Reyneck Matemba
confirmed it was probing the contract over police food but declined to give
further details.
“We
are about to conclude our investigations,” he told AFP.
Malawi, one of the world’s
poorest and aid-dependent countries, will hold presidential and parliamentary
elections in May 2019. Graft cases have recently rocked Malawian politics.
Mutharika was elected in 2014
after his predecessor Joyce Banda was embroiled in the “Cashgate” scandal when
government officials siphoned off millions of dollars of public money.
Banda returned to Malawi in
April after four years of self-imposed exile and said she was ready to run in
the elections against Mutharika.
In April, thousands of
Malawians took part in the country’s first nationwide anti-government
demonstrations since 2011.
The marches, organised by
civil action groups, were against alleged corruption and poor governance under
Mutharika.
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