Malawi's ex-president Banda to return after four-year exile
Malawi's former president, Joyce Banda, who is expected to fly home
Saturday after four years of self-imposed exile, despite facing the
threat of arrest over corruption allegations. AFP PHOTO | AMOS GUMULIRA
Malawi's former president, Joyce Banda, is
expected to fly home Saturday after four years of self-imposed exile,
despite facing the threat of arrest over corruption allegations.
Banda
fled the country in 2014 when she lost power after being embroiled in
the so-called Cashgate scandal, in which government officials siphoned
off millions of dollars of public money.
Banda
— only the second woman to lead a country in Africa — is due to land at
Chileka International Airport outside Blantyre, the country's economic
capital, at midday (1000 GMT) on a flight from Johannesburg.
Her spokesman Andekunye Chanthunya said she would head straight to her home at Domasi in Zomba, about 80 kilometres away.
Local media have reported a possible deal between President Peter Mutharika and Banda ahead of next year's elections.
Banda
founded the People's Party (PP) in 2011 after splitting from the
Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which is led by Mutharika.
"We will hear what her thoughts are on Sunday when she will address a political rally," Chanthunya told AFP.
"She
remains the head of the PP. The question of whether she wants to
contest for the presidency or not will be answered in due course, but we
may get an idea of how she is thinking."
Arrest
Police
spokesman James Kaledzera declined to say if Banda would be arrested,
though he confirmed that a warrant issued last July remained valid.
Earlier
this year, the Malawi Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) said it had no solid
evidence against the former president, partially clearing her name.
The
"Cashgate" scandal prompted foreign donors — who provide around 40
percent of Malawi's budget — to pull the plug on aid worth around $150
million.
Ministers, civil servants
and businessmen are accused of pocketing money from government coffers
through ghost companies which did not provide any services to the state.
The
biggest financial scandal in Malawi's history helped push Banda out of
power in the 2014 election, and Mutharika vowed to clean up the system
to bring donors back.
The graft
started in 2005, and more than $30 million was looted within only six
months in 2013 shortly before it was uncovered, according to an
independent audit.
Malawi, one of the
world's poorest and aid-dependent countries, will hold presidential,
parliamentary and council elections in May 2019.
Banda came to power in 2012 when Bingu wa Mutharika, the current president's brother, died in office.
Major role in the elections
She
has spent much of her time abroad in the United States and her return
has been postponed several times, most recently last year when the
arrest warrant was issued.
Political analyst Henry Chingaipe said her influence was uncertain and she could struggle to play a major role in the elections.
"If
she is coming home just to live, OK. But if she is coming to contest
for the presidency, her party is in tatters," he told AFP.
"The decision to leave the country for so long eroded trust in her leadership."
The
World Bank resumed aid to Malawi in May last year, providing an $80
million package and saying the country had "taken some very important
reform steps".
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