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Malawi: President Chakwera Fires Agriculture Minister and Deputy in Crackdown On Fraud

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In a televised address to the nation, Malawi President Lazarus Chakwera fired Agriculture Minister Lobin Lowe and his deputy to immediate effect for “incompetence and gross negligence.”

Chakwera did not mince his words on Tuesday evening as he described how Lowe allegedly failed to supply Malawi’s 3.3 million smallholder farmers with inputs and fertiliser from the Affordable Imputs Programme (AIP).

The president outlined in detail the alleged fraud committed in the ministry, including how a British agent was used to secure fertilizer for the programme, but was not properly vetted.

The agent was paid 725,000 euros in two installments “without any credible evidence that this company had any credibility to secure fertiliser,” said Chakwera, adding, “The supplier’s capacity turned out to be without merit.”

The British company, which he did not identify by name, asked for the payment to be made in two different installments in two different bank accounts in two different countries.

“In light of this, the food security of the country has been left in great jeopardy,” he said.

#Malawi President @LazarusChakwera has fired Agriculture Minister Lobin Lowe and replaced him with Sam Kawale after Lowe oversaw a deal where government lost K750 million to UK butcher Barkaat Foods for the procurement of fertilizer for the flagship Affordable Input Program.– Jack McBrams (@mcbrams) October 25, 2022

Over six months ago, at the start of the financial year, he instructed the heads of the agriculture and the affordable inputs program to put the program in place by September.

“They have failed to do this, and it is a failure I consider completely unacceptable.”

Getting back Malawi’s money

Chakwera told Malawians that he went into emergency mode in order to try and salvage the planting season, as well as deal with recovering the money “illegally” paid to the unnamed British agent.

After terminating the contract, Malawi‘s attorney general office went to both banks in two different countries that had received the money and is in the process of recovering the money.

Once the $725,000 is back in Malawi “the treasury will issue a public notice to inform you of the same,” he told viewers, dismissing rumours circulated by an MP in agriculture department who said the missing money totaled 29.3 million euros.