Email a copy of 'Mutharika says no jokes on mice-eating, yams not grasshoppers: Malawi President says indulging in mice meals himself' to a friend
Loading ...
Email a copy of 'Mutharika says no jokes on mice-eating, yams not grasshoppers: Malawi President says indulging in mice meals himself' to a friend
President Peter Muthalika, who is also the leader of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), has on Friday told Malawians that ...
Soon after independence in 1964,the international communitity especially the African nations ,shouted hoarse.Malawi them selves ,were the happiest folks to arrive at that day(6th JULy,1964).Unfortunately two months later,9th August,1964,the party was over once and for all.Since that day,hitherto,Malawians have been living under hellish sort of human life without rival elsewhere in Africa apart from few failed States.Where did we go astray? Let me a bit endeavour to explain what overwhelming masses of young men and young women still do not comprehend fully what had just propped up then.It started a month before the Independence Day by the first brilliant and… Read more »
Ngati mwamva njala musachedwe idyani zitchetche ndi mbewa msanga ndipo njala yonse izathawa…..copyright professorial guide 2016
kenaka atiwuza kuti tizidya ng’ona
The lomwe’s even eat rats, so mice is an improvement
Simply put the other way round; the advice is for those who eat nsima mamawa masana ndi madzulo.These people continue doing this as usual even after straggling to buy the scarce maize from ADMARC.They also straggle to find ndiwo to meet the three times a day nsima that they eat.Iam of the opinion that if they can reduce nsima and eat futali( from sweet potato), cassava,yams etc, they can still survive. This was also a similar advice from Kamuzu and Muluzi in similar situations in the past.
This Midnight Six thief will destroy Malawi. Bring back our 61 billion chonde
O………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….O COVER A KILOBYTE AND EXPOSE THE GIGABYTE So APM thinks the advice on yams and tubers is better and more hope-giving than otherwise? . . . Just come to think of it . . . If, by whatever misfortune, you find yourself caught up in a possibility of being eaten by a lion. Can someone come and say, “kukamabwera mkango thawani”? . . . Isnt this what every(normal)body would naturally do? Now, what’s this that APM is talking about? when he tells people to eat yams and tubers? . . . Isnt resolting to eating yams, what people would… Read more »
The Analyst you are thinking like a normal person should, and you are right, but, Malawians, since the dawn of multi party do not behave like normal people. Do you need to wait for government to do everything for you? what is government? does government die of starvation? In Malawi if someone is doing well, people plot to bring them down. Do you remember there was a chap farming at Zalewa, and every time you passed there there was green maize, what did Malawians do, provoked him to the extent he was implicated in murder, do you see any maize… Read more »
Why was he trying to justify the implication? He knows the fact that he went around the country with maize telling people to vote for him if they want maize as if DPP has a farm or can provide rains on people’s farms. It’s high time these politians stop taking people for granted.
Mutharika you imbecile if your area I.e. the lomwes love to eat mice so be it but you insult the rest of the Malawians by asking them to eat mice.
You are are oblivious to the suffering of the rest of the country. Look at your size you grow fatter by the way.
was he not speaking to the people of Thyolo?
No waste of time on these simple issues. The president is trying to inform the nation of alternatives of nsima and regular ndiwo to reduce this poverty. If we have other means then we can advise him and inform the nation of the same…
Martin, you are right people should not major in minor. Though you debate it politically, will it solve the hunger problem?
UN urges people to eat insects to fight world hunger
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-22508439