A nation waiting for action

By Alick Ponje

A nation waiting for action

President Peter Mutharika has finally assembled his full Cabinet after two earlier rounds of piecemeal appointments.

Whatever caused the delays remains unclear. Perhaps it was a matter of strategy, ensuring that those who assumed they had guaranteed places in the Cabinet had their expectations carefully managed over time.

Whatever the reason, that debate is now secondary. What matters most is that Malawians expect the newly appointed ministers to get to work immediately.

Across ministries there are urgent crises that require strong leadership and decisive policy direction. Malawians have waited long enough for tangible change and there is no room for complacency.

One of the most pressing challenges lies within the Ministry of Homeland Security. The passport crisis has become a national embarrassment.

Ordinary Malawians wait endlessly for the travel documents, often losing out on jobs, scholarships and medical appointments abroad.

It is a crisis that symbolises administrative inefficiency and disregard for the struggles of ordinary people.

The ministry must urgently streamline the passport production process, ensure transparency in procurement and restore public confidence in a system that has been riddled with corruption and mismanagement.

The education sector is also in disarray. Standards have fallen sharply while teachers continue to feel demoralised by poor pay and inadequate support.

Many schools lack even the most basic resources such as textbooks, laboratories and furniture. In rural areas, children still learn under trees or in dilapidated classrooms.

The Ministry of Education must prioritise investment in infrastructure as well as better management of the teaching workforce.

A country cannot develop if its citizens are denied quality education and Malawi's future depends on how well we educate the next generation.

The public works sector presents another serious concern. Several major infrastructure projects, including the long-delayed M1 Road rehabilitation, have stalled or been executed poorly.

Substandard construction and inflated contracts have become common, costing taxpayers extra billions.

The new minister must insist on quality and value for money. Monitoring mechanisms must be strengthened so that contractors who fail to deliver face meaningful penalties.

Infrastructure development is central to economic growth, yet it will only serve the people if managed with integrity and efficiency.

Corruption remains one of the greatest obstacles to progress. Despite repeated promises, the fight against graft has been inconsistent and often politicised.

It is worrying that some people facing corruption charges have returned to positions of influence.

While everyone deserves the presumption of innocence, countries that are serious about ending corruption ensure that suspects step aside until they are cleared.

Allowing such individuals to wield public power sends the wrong message and undermines public trust in government.

Malawi needs stronger and truly independent anti-corruption institutions, as well as political will from the highest office to see the fight through.

The government must also promote a culture of integrity across public institutions by protecting whistle-blowers and ensuring that investigations are transparent and free from political interference.

The economy is in dire straits. Foreign exchange shortages have crippled imports, while fuel queues stretch for hours across the country.

Prices of essential goods have risen beyond reach and many families can no longer afford three meals a day.

Small businesses are collapsing as operational costs soar, while farmers, who form the backbone of the economy, face uncertainty due to high input prices.

The government must introduce practical measures to stabilise the currency, revive production and create an environment where both small and large enterprises can thrive.

Supporting farmers with affordable inputs will also help restore food security and rural livelihoods.

Malawians have been deeply disappointed by the past administration that promised reform but delivered very little.

Trust in government is fragile and this new Cabinet must understand that expectations are high.

Citizens want to see real change, better public services, more accountability and improved living standards.

Ministers must demonstrate that they are in office to serve the people, not themselves. They must adopt a spirit of transparency and urgency in all that they do.

It is encouraging that Mutharika has directed ministries to submit monthly performance reports. This approach can help track progress and identify areas needing intervention.

However, such reports will only be useful if they are accurate and independently verified. Too often, previous administrations have boasted of projects that existed only on paper.

The government must establish transparent monitoring mechanisms that allow Parliament, civil society and the public to scrutinise the work being done.

The Cabinet now has a clear choice: to continue business as usual or to bring about the meaningful transformation Malawians deserve.

The country's challenges are immense, but with honest leadership and commitment, they are not insurmountable.

What the nation needs most is action; swift, focused and transparent action that begins today.

Previous articleNext article

POPULAR CATEGORY

misc

18058

entertainment

18994

corporate

15779

research

9702

wellness

15689

athletics

20072