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Roundtable Dwangwa 69, to assist learners with disabilities in Nkhotakota
By Wongani Mkandawire
Nkhotakota, December 11, Mana: A social networking and charitable movement called "Roundtable Dwangwa 69" has expressed commitment to address challenges learners with disabilities are facing at Nkhotakota Resource Centre.
Speaking on Sunday during Pre-Christmas celebration and donation to learners at the centre, Chairperson for Dwangwa 69, Dyson Mpeketula said their movement will continue to assist the centre with different support such as linking them up with local and international sponsors to fulfil their dreams.
"We are here having a meal together with them but we are looking for transformation of projects that will change their lives forever," said Mpekutula.
In his remarks, Head teacher for Nkhotakota LEA primary school Ability Chioza Mashikizo described the celebration as timely adding that the donation will go a long way in addressing some of the challenges like basic needs for the learners.
One of the learners with disabilities, Andrea Chabwera asked well-wishers and other organisations to assist them with learning materials and other daily needs.
The Roundtable Dwangwa 69 pumped in K500, 000 for Pre-Christmas celebration with learners with disabilities and donated assorted food items at the centre.
During the event, it was discovered that the school lacks better infrastructure including hostels which leave learners with no choice but to put up in dilapidated rooms for lack of better options
Taming ‘ecosystem engineers’ of Kasungu National Park
By Wanangwa Tembo
Kasungu, December 11, Mana: Up to early 1990s, Kasungu National Park, the country’s second largest after Nyika, had the largest elephant population in Malawi with over 2 000 individuals roaming freely in the vastness of the protected area.
“This was also the case with most of the other species like buffalo, kudu, sable and hartebeest,” Park Manager, Ndaona Kumanga explains.
However, at the beginning of the new millennium, poachers from the surrounding communities and beyond invaded the park with blazing muzzleloaders shooting game, especially, buffaloes and elephants for both meat and trophies.
By 2015, the elephant population had plummeted down to only about 200, rendering the park unattractive to tourists as animal sighting spiraled to lowest levels.
“This is the period poaching was at its peak owing to lapses in security largely due to lack of funding.
“Again this is the time the buffer zone which averaged 2.1 kilometres in thickness was invaded and cleared for charcoal, settlements and farming,” Kumanga says.
Historically, the park used to be a dwelling place for people who lived on hunting and their settlement continued well into the 20th century before the place was proclaimed Fort Alston Forest Reserve in 1922 and later a game reserve in 1930.
Signs of old village sites are still clearly visible today alongside Iron Age artefacts in form of iron kilns and the famous Solonje rock paintings.
Thus, the invasion of the park for livelihood by the surrounding communities could as well be understood as a hangover of an old lifestyle.
Nevertheless, these actions threaten the future of the park, where not only the country’s largest Miombo woodland sits, but also where ecosystem engineers – as elephants are called for their large contribution to ecosystem balancing – roam.
Following its declaration as a national park in 1970, government gazetted a buffer zone adjacent to the park’s south-eastern boundary to limit cultivation, planting, cutting, building, carrying firearms and starting fires.
Averaging 2.1 kilometres in thickness and about 75 kilometres in length, the buffer zone has long been cleared for settlements and cultivation.
According to Central Region Parks and Wildlife Division Manager, Leonard Moyo, efforts to save Kasungu National Park became more realistic in 2016 when his department entered into a partnership with International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW).
“We partnered with IFAW in 2016 and their coming has helped a lot in securing the park such that around 2021, we were convinced that the park had finally been fortified.
“This is why in 2022, IFAW supported us to translocate at least 694 animal species including 263 elephants from Liwonde to Kasungu in a restocking programme to boost the numbers of the key wildlife species,” Moyo says.
He says high poverty levels amongst some communities surrounding the park is still posing a threat to conservation efforts and the future of the protected area, stressing that poverty has for a long time forced people to view the park as a source of their livelihood.
Kasungu National Park is surrounded by nine traditional authorities namely Lukwa, Kaphaizi, Lukwa, Mwase, Nthunduwala, Mawawa, Chulu, Chisinga and Kawamba.
“We don’t want to slide back to the sad past. This time we are carrying out various initiatives to support the surrounding communities to build their resilience so that they stop relying on the park products for their livelihood,” Moyo says.
Under these initiatives, communities have been trained in climate smart agriculture so that they boost their crop production and become food secure. In addition, the communities have been given free tree and crop seeds.
“We sent lead farmers for training in Zambia so that they learn how our colleagues are doing that side.
“We have also provided these lead farmers with bicycles to ease their mobility as they go round communities training others,” Moyo says.
The department has also donated at least 800 beehives which will be put both inside and outside the park as an alternative income generating activity for the communities.
With its ‘Room to Roam’ vision, IFAW is extensively supporting wildlife conservation efforts for Africa’s surviving savannah elephants including those at Kasungu National Park and the human communities with which they share the land and its resources.
Gervaz Thamala is the Field Operations Manager for IfFAW. He says the future of Kasungu National Park lies in the hands of an understanding community that appreciates the importance of co-existing with the animals.
“The people that kill the animals, cut trees and destroy the fence, live in the surrounding communities. Our efforts will be in vain if we don’t support them,” he says.
Thamala, says there is need to arrest activities that threaten the future of the park by ensuring co-existence of animals and the people.
“The people must not be a burden to animals through such activities as poaching and cutting trees thereby destroying the habitat for animals. Equally the animals must not be a burden to people.
“We are erecting a perimeter fence to keep the animals in the park so that they don’t destroy people’s gardens. At the same time we are coming with new initiatives supporting the communities so that they don’t invade the park for livelihood,” he says.
There have been clashes between communities surrounding the park and elephants in recent times. At least six people have been killed so far with several gardens of crops and houses destroyed.
The elephant’s invasion of homes and gardens is said to have increased the people’s antagonistic behaviours towards the beasts and the park at large.
Under the same initiative, the park authorities have also started constructing elephant proof granaries so that in case of elephants’ invasion, the grain that has already been harvested is protected.
“We expect that people will form clubs or cooperatives and will be keeping their produce at one place. So we are supporting them with storage infrastructure that is free from the threat of elephants.
“We hope all these initiatives put together make a serious statement on our resolve to protect both the park and the surrounding communities,” Thamala says.
Elephants being large herbivores, eat up to 150 kilograms of forage and drink up to 190 litres of water a day. They must navigate across large areas to find enough food and water to survive.
However, as climate change raises temperatures and changes rainfall patterns, resources become even more scarce and elephants get pushed into new areas, including communal lands where they destroy crops and houses.
The problem has been exacerbated by cultivation of crops along the park boundary and inadequate perimeter fencing which is only covering an 88-kilometre distance, leaving a stretch of at least 40 kilometres open.
Group Village Head Jambulani Nkhoma of Traditional Authority Lukwa says there must be a cordial working relationship between park authorities and communities so that conservation efforts are successful.
She says communities must accept that the park was established for purpose and that they must protect it.
“We have failed to plant trees and now our eyes are on the park. The park will not solve our problems if we don’t plant trees and adopt new farming methods in face of the changing climate,” she says.
Ecologically, Kasungu National Park is the catchment for Dwangwa River that flows east to Lake Malawi through the densely populated Kasungu District, sustaining settlements and agriculture and contributing to the maintenance of viable fish stocks for the lake.
Economically, elephants are the largest tourist attraction in Kasungu National Park, promoting tourism which is one of government priority areas, contributing 7.7 percent towards the Gross Domestic Product of which 2.7 percent is from the wildlife sector.
Kande Health Centre gets solar powered water supply system
By Chisomo Kambandanga
Nkhata Bay, December 11, Mana: Nurse-in-Charge for Kande Health Centre in Nkhata Bay, Chipiliro Chaluwa says the facility has been grappling with lack of portable water over the past seven years.
Speaking on Monday, during commissioning of a solar powered water project at the health centre, Chaluwa said the facility faced challenges in infection control and maintaining hygiene, which particularly affected the maternity wing.
He explained: "Mostly, we referred patients to Chintheche Hospital because without water we could not provide other critical services.
"At times we could send guardians to fetch water from far distances where they were also scrambling with community members. Now that we have this solar energy generating facility, we thank government for the consideration."
Senior Chief Fukamapiri described the solar water supply system as landmark, saying people in his area will access health services they were deprived of due to lack of portable water at the facility.
“It was worrying to see people mainly expectant mothers walking long distances to Chintheche Hospital when our area has a health facility. This water project is not only helping the health centre but also Kande Primary School and surrounding communities,” he said.
Nkhata Bay District Commissioner (DC), Rodgers Newa said the solar powered water supply system will provide access to portable water to over 16500 members of surrounding communities.
The project has been implemented by Nkhata Bay District Council with support from UNICEF and USAID as a response to cholera outbreak in 2022
Ignorance and poverty fueling GBV cases in Ntchisi
By Maria Tembo
Ntchisi, December 7, Mana: Ntchisi Gender office says ignorance and poverty are major contributing factors to increasing cases of Gender Based Violence (GBV) in the district.
Gender Development officer in the district Chikondi Macheso said this on Wednesday at Chikho 2 primary school ground in Sub Traditional Authority Kasakula during launch of this year's 16 day of activism against gender based violence.
She said it is worrisome that such cases continue to rise in the district despite different interventions being implemented.
“This year alone 3309 cases of Gender Based Violence (GBV) have been registered in the district and not more than 2000 cases were registered last year,” explained Macheso.
Present at the event was Council Chairperson for the district Arnold Kapolo who said the council will continue to sensitive people on GBV to reduce such cases, adding that this year the cases were high compared to last year and that perpetrators will face the law.
Kapolo then appealed to chiefs in the district to be on the fore front in sensitising their subjects about GBV and to continue reporting perpetrators of such cases to relevant authorities if they are to win and reduce GBV cases in the district.
“It is sad that women and girls continue to face GBV be it at home and school as such, we would like to encourage them to report any form of such cases to relevant authorities for perpetrators to face the law and for the district to register zero GBV cases,” said Kapolo.
Sub T/A Kasakula whose area has registered more cases of GBV said he will put in place measures that will help in reducing such cases in the area and the district at large.
The Ntchisi Gender office also awarded traditional leaders and social workers whose areas managed to reduce GBV cases in the district.
This year’s commemoration is under the theme: " Invest to End Gender Based Violence in Malawi".
14,943 households to benefit from the TC Response Programme in CK
By Lawrence Chilomo and Willy Kadewere
Chikwawa, December 7, Mana: Malawi Government through Social Support for Resilient Livelihoods Project (SSLRP) has started disbursement of K150, 000 to 14,943 households who were affected by Tropical Cyclone Freddy in Chikwawa district.
The disbursement which is supported by the World Bank started his week and is meant to assist affected households to recover from the socio-economic effects of the cyclone.
Senior Land Resources Conservation Officer for Chikwawa, Ackim Dickson said the cash will assist the beneficiaries in sourcing their requirements after Tropical Cyclone Freddy devastation.
“Due to Tropical Cyclone Freddy, the families lost properties and food. It is therefore our hope that they will purchase food for their families,” said Dickson.
“The money is for three months, amounting to K50,000 per month, covering November, December, and January, totalling to K150,000,” he added and further urged beneficiary households to use the cash responsibly to meet their family needs.
In her remarks, one of the beneficiaries from Chagambatuka Village, Traditional Authority Makhuwira, Melia Alfred commended the government for the initiative.
“This money will transform help my family to meet basic needs because I will buy food and other necessities,” said Alfred.
She therefore appealed to fellow beneficiaries to use the money wisely saying this was an opportunity for the beneficiary households to improve their living standards after losing property and food due to Tropical Cyclone Freddy.
Apart from Chikwawa, the disbursements are also being implemented in Nsanje, Phalombe, Mulanje and Zomba.
Nomads Goof Off second leg match against Silver Strikers
By Petro Mkandawire
Blantyre, December 6, Mana: Silver Strikers has progresses to Airtel Top 8 semifinals with two goals after Mighty Mukuru Wanderers goofed off the second leg match on Wednesday at Kamuzu Stadium.
The Nomads played truant following the appeal of their board of directors to the court on their matter that the determination was not made in the spirit of fair play having noted that the cause of the matter was a bad decision by the referee on their first leg match with the bankers at Bingu National Stadium (BNS).
In a post-match interview, Silver Strikers Head Coach, Pieter De Jongh said it was a bad decision by Nomads not to show up for the game and bad market in the sector of football considering that Airtel Top 8 is one of the elite cups in Malawi and Airtel was a big sponsor.
“It is bad and this bears negative impact on the football of Malawi to abscond from the game as it dents the image of the country more especially on football sector. As a team, they were supposed to respect the rules of football,” said Jongh.
He added that following the incident they will still move forward looking for their next match where they will play against Mafco on December 10 at BNS saying they have to prepare well since Mafco has quality players which, if they hesitate the preparation, they will be disappointed with the results.
Nomads board is dismayed with the fact that both Football Association of Malawi (FAM) competitions and disciplinary committees do not take cognizance that the referee is the root cause of the challenges at hand so they have the game against Silver Strikers postponed until the matter is held and resolved.
Speaking with Malawi News Agency (MANA), FAM Competition and Communications Director, Gomezgani Zakazaka said it was unfortunate that the Nomads didn’t show up for the game.
He said this means that the rules and regulations of the competition will be followed and it is up to the competition committee to come up with a way forward.
“We do see this happening but not at this top level of the competition, when we are playing in the lower leagues, some of these things happened. We don’t expect that we are able to display such malpractice because such behaviors depress football in the country,” said Zakazaka.
Let’s put our pride aside - Chakwera
By Kumbukani Kondowe
Lilongwe, December 7, Mana: President, Lazarus Chakwera has asked Malawians to put aside pride and walk in integrity for the nation to receive Gods blessings saying pride prevents people from receiving blessings that God has prepared for them.
and this in return leaves the nation in impoverished state.
He was speaking on Thursday in Lilongwe during National Day of Prayer organised by Evangelical Association of Malawi.
“Now that we have presented our requests to God through prayer, we must let God appear to us to remove our prideful attitude and renounce our wicked ways because pride and wickedness either hinders us from receiving Gods blessings or cause us to squander those blessings after we have received,” said Chakwera
The president referred to the biblical story of King Solomon when God appeared to him in the dream telling him that “if his people, who are called by His name shall humble themselves and pray and seek his face and turn from their wicked ways, then He would hear from heaven and forgive their sins and will heal their land.
Chakwera likened the story to Malawi as a God fearing nation saying the country needs to go back to God and ask for forgiveness because this is the only way through which the nation can be healed from the current challenges it is going through.
“We have a lake with fresh water but we can’t take water to people’s houses because we can’t humble ourselves to work with one another, we have young and energetic people but we can’t incorporate them in institutions for our own wicked and selfish interests, we have land to produce enough food but the corrupt people steal those same resources meant to subsidise fertilizers to help the poor people
As we leave this place of prayer, God is reminding us to stop our wicked ways, to go back into our respective stations and conduct ourselves with enough humility to work together, not against each other but with enough integrity to work for the common good of the nation and not for selfish reasons,” said Chakwera
In his remarks, Bishop Montfort Sitima, chairperson of the 2023 National Day of Prayers organising committee and Vice Chairperson of Evangelical Association of Malawi said the prayers were for everyone to thank God and ask him to lead Malawi according to its culture and values.
“The prayers were organised for everyone from Nsanje to Chitipa, Salima to Mchinji, the prayers were not for an individual person or a particular party. We are all Malawians belonging to one nation, therefore we must be patriotic towards our nation as we work together,”
We have not seen opposition party members here so let me say that Malawi is one and not two nations one for opposition and one for ruling party whereby the president calls for prayers and the opposition not showing up,” said Sitima
2023 National Day of prayer was organised by Evangelical Association of Malawi and other religious leaders under the theme “Malawi: a hopeful and resilient Nation”
Different people from all regions including traditional leaders participated in the prayers.
Lipunga Primary School: a beacon of resilience in the hard-to-reach areas
By Vincent Khonje
Mchinji, December 7, Mana: In the remote area of sub-traditional authority (STA) Kapunula in Mchinji, on the Malawian border with Zambia, lies a primary school called Lipunga.
The humble institution is nestled over 60 kilometres from Mchinji Boma and faces the challenges of a poor road network.
The school sits in the middle of hills and some other social amenities apart from the school itself are not there.
It takes the members of the community hours to access the nearest hospital at Mkanda Trading Centre.
Lipunga Primary School, with 1,008 learners, currently faces challenges with inadequate teaching and learning resources and, to cap it all, the classes from standard one to eight have no desks.
Despite the school finding itself in the face of adversity, it has emerged as a shining example of resilience and success by defying the odds.
At Lipunga Primary School, the bond between the community and teachers is a beacon of inspiration.
Headmaster Nephtari Safali proudly shares: "The relationship between the community and the teachers has been a motivation for teachers to stay despite being in a hard-to-reach area."
The community's commitment goes beyond words, ensuring the teachers have a place to call home, gifting rewards to teachers when students excel, and even providing pieces of land for teachers to cultivate crops.
The awesome gesture from the community has made it possible for teachers to be retained in the hard-to-reach area unlike in other schools.
However, the community’s warm-heartedness to the teachers is not for nothing, there has to be a favour the teachers have to return to the community too.
Azele Zimba, the Parents and Teachers Association (PTA) chairperson, emphasises the community's commitment to education.
"We sit down with teachers and understand their needs. In return, we support them, knowing this area lacks basic amenities. We aim to ensure teachers are happy so that our children receive quality education,” explains Zimba.
It is common for teachers to write the district education office to be moved from hard-to-reach areas to places close to towns and trading centres, but not for one, Dyson Jereman, a teacher at the school.
Despite being at the far end of the country on the borders of Malawi and Zambia with fewer amenities, Jereman has stayed for 12 years and feels at home.
Jereman says he is motivated to stay at Lipunga because the community is accommodative and understanding.
“I cherish the unity which is here between the community and among ourselves as teachers. The loving community provides us with necessary needs and we feel we are welcome, so there is no need to leave,” says Jereman.
He boasts that he has a dimba given by the community which affords him to grow various crops to support his family.
Blessings Khumalo echoes Jereman’s sentiments, saying the community at Lipunga is just pure at heart to the extent that she feels at home in the area.
Khumalo, who is one of the two female teachers at the school, says they are treated well and this serves as motivation to reciprocate the gesture by making sure the learners are given full support.
“The bond is just tight, this is what keeps us going despite some challenges,” says Khumalo who has even gotten married to a man from the same area.
The school has eight teachers’ houses and the community on its own constructed five of those.
The commitment of Lipunga's community and its educators has yielded remarkable results.
In both 2022 and 2023 academic years, the school achieved a 100 percent success rate in the Primary School Leaving Certificate Examinations (PSLCE).
What's more, in 2023, 64 out of 110 learners secured places in secondary schools.
With only 11 teachers, this number is considered adequate compared to other schools in such remote areas which usually have fewer teachers since they run away to other better schools.
Lipunga school, however, continues to provide quality education against all odds.
News of Lipunga's triumphs has spread beyond Mchinji.
A delegation from Karonga, comprising head teachers, school management committees (SMC) members, district education network (DEN) members, PTA members, primary school education advisors (PEAs), and other educationists visited Lipunga School just to learn a few things.
The trip was facilitated by Governance for Solutions (GFS).
William Ngwira, the Chairperson of Karonga DEN, expressed his admiration.
"Karonga has many hard-to-reach areas, but it's difficult to retain teachers, compromising education quality. We came to learn from the inspiring news from Lipunga, to understand what they do differently and see if we can replicate it," said Ngwira.
The fact that the Karonga delegates travelled over 600 km to Mchinji just to learn from a school in the far-flung areas of the district has excited Samson Kawiya, Mchinji's principal education officer.
Kawiya has praised Lipunga's approach and stressed the importance of community-teacher collaboration.
"This is the kind of mutualism we need between the community and professionals if we want to realise quality education," he remarks.
Mchinji education office oversees other schools in hard-to-reach areas like Kazyozyo, Kavunguti, Katonda and Gumba Zones.
However, it is not the first time Lipunga has been associated with success as the head teacher, Safali, was chosen the best head teacher in Mchinji and received an award and a bicycle at the World Teachers Day celebration in Mzuzu on 18 October 2023.
In Mchinji, Lipunga Primary School stands not just as a school but as a testament to the remarkable heights that can be achieved when communities and educators join forces to defy the challenges of a hard-to-reach landscape