Malawi's President Peter Mutharika completes naming his 20-member cabinet
overnight, bringing in a prominent opposition leader more than a month after
chaotic elections that brought him to office.
BLANTYRE - Malawi's President Peter Mutharika completed naming his 20-member
cabinet overnight, bringing in a prominent opposition leader more than a month
after chaotic elections that brought him to office.
The completed cabinet includes United Democratic Front presidential candidate
Atupele Muluzi, who came in fourth in the disputed May ballot and was named as
minister of natural resources, energy and mining.
A son of a former president, Muluzi becomes the only opposition lawmaker in
Mutharika's cabinet.
The 36-year-old briefly worked as economic planning minister under ex-leader
Joyce Banda before he quit to pursue his presidential bid.
Naming his 20-member cabinet in dribs and drabs, Mutharika first appointed
the finance minister three weeks ago, then last week released nine names before
completing the entire team around midnight.
He has tapped former finance minister Goodall Gondwe,78, to resume his
position and brought back several other old faces who worked under the
administration of his sibling Bingu wa Mutharika, who died in office in
2012.
"The president has lived to his word to have a cabinet of not more than 20
ministers and deputies in order to cut costs," state house press officer Justice
Mponda, said after releasing the new full list.
Mutharika, who is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, has combined
the defence ministry to his portfolio.
Vice President Saulos Chilima will also be responsible for the 170 000-strong
civil service and parastatals.
The President has also named former and veteran state secretary Bright Msaka
as Minister of lands, housing and urban development.
The whole cabinet has only two deputies - Vincent Ngambi for education and
Jampi Mhango at defence.
The finance minister Gondwe, a former official at the International Monetary
Fund, will present his budget in September, instead of the traditional July to
allow more time for wide consultations.
Donors, who bankroll up to 40 percent of the country's development budget,
have suspended aid worth $150 million until the government cleans up the mess
after more than $30 million was looted from state coffers in six months in the
Cashgate scandal during Banda's era.
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