President in Malawi for Mutharika burial

 

Speaking to journalists at Chileka International Airport, President Mugabe said the death of President wa Mutharika was a shock to him, the First Lady Amai Grace Mugabe and the entire Zimbabwean populace because of the relationship between Zimbabwe and Malawi.

The loss of a leader here is our loss; we have come to console you. So we are together, we mourn together and we shall always be together,” said President Mugabe.

The President and his delegation were received by senior Malawian government officials and officials from the Zimbabwe embassy in that country.

He will join five other African leaders who have confirmed their attendance at the funeral.
African Union chairman and Benin’s President Thomas Yayi Boni, Presidents Hifikepunye Pohamba (Namibia), Jakaya Kikwete (Tanzania), Armando Guebuza (Mozambique) and Mwai Kibaki (Kenya) are expected to attend the burial, according to media reports quoting chairperson of the funeral committee Mr Henry Mussa.

Mr Mussa is the Minister of Local Government in Malawi.

President wa Mutharika who died two weeks ago of heart failure will be buried today at a family mausoleum at his Ndata Farm in Thyolo, a district about 50km from the commercial capital Blantyre.

New President Joyce Banda’s office declared today a public holiday “to give the former president a dignified and honourable state funeral and many Malawians an opportunity to attend the funeral ceremony”.
Zimbabwe and Malawi enjoy cordial relations at bilateral, regional and multilateral levels.

In his condolence message soon after the President wa Mutharika’s death, President Mugabe said the Malawian leader dedicated his professional and political career to the cause of the continent and spent a great deal of time seeking ways to uplift Africans.

He died at a time Zimbabwe was working to concretise his wish for Harare to help Malawi with fuel supply and storage.
Analysts have said his death was a blow to Africa’s integration agenda.

“The death of President Bingu wa Mutharika early this month has not only robbed Malawi of its leader but also deprived Africa of a fearless campaigner for deeper regional integration and agrarian revolution.

“Mutharika, who died on 5 April due to a heart failure, played an instrumental role in southern Africa’s efforts to transform the region from a food deficit area to one producing surplus grain.

“Doubling as Malawi’s Agriculture Minister, Mutharika introduced a grain subsidy programme in 2005 to increase the provision of maize seed and fertilizer to smallholder farmers by more than 75 percent.

“As a result, Malawi’s maize production trebled from about 1, 2 million metric tonnes in the 2004/5 agricultural season to 3, 4 million metric tonnes in 2007/08,” reported sardc.net.

However, at the time of his death Malawi was experiencing foreign currency and fuel shortages following withdrawal of donor support after Dr wa Mutharika refused to be bullied by the west.

“Wa Mutharika’s good track record during his first term in office was quickly forgotten in 2010 when he refused to be bullied by Britain and invited the wrath of Malawi’s former colonial ruler by expelling the British high commissioner.

“For routinely standing his ground against Western powers, wa Mutharika was labelled an intolerant and autocratic leader whose government became a target of external regime change agents,” reported sardc.net.

Malawians have been paying their last respects to their leader since his body was flown home from South Africa on 14 April.

The body has been taken to the country’s major centres to give Malawians an opportunity to mourn Dr wa Mutharika.
And today Malawians are expected to throng Dr wa Mutharika’s farm to give him a huge send off.

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