Email a copy of 'Malawi needs a healing process: Political affiliations in Malawi are largely tribal based' to a friend

* Required Field






Separate multiple entries with a comma. Maximum 5 entries.



Separate multiple entries with a comma. Maximum 5 entries.


E-Mail Image Verification

Loading ... Loading ...

Sharing is caring!

2 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Fisoe
Fisoe
6 years ago

Actually every country in Africa that is experiencing fast growth are governed under some form of federal (decentralization) – Kenya, South Africa, Mozambique, Nigeria, Ghana… but here the problem is that decentralization is associated with the northerners… let sleeping dogs continue lying down and complaining for the next 53 years…

ChangingFaces
ChangingFaces
6 years ago

first off, for 3 decades, Dr Banda persuaded us to forget our tribes and fashion a single Malawian identity; did we take heed? No. And, with the birth of CHEFO, Mulhakhoism, Umthetho-Mzimba, Maseko-Ntcheu, Ndamsyo-Chibanja Cha a Yao, and Mulhakhoism influencing government policy, tribalism could get worse.

Once again, federalism will become necessary to counter excessive tribal domination. Malawians will get TIRED of presidents coming from the South only. It is just a matter of time…Federalism will come to pass.

In Belgium, federalism was adopted expressly to deal with the ethnicity problem. We could do the same here.

Read previous post:
Dausi says Malawi’s rapid population growth alarming

Minister of Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Nicholas Dausi has bemoaned the country’s rapid population growth since independence, saying it...

Close