on provisions contained in the National
Access to Information Policy which government adopted in January 2014. So
the concerns of government appear to
be in contradiction of the principles it
promoted prior to elections.
Although Cabinet rejected the Bill,
MISA Malawi and different stakeholders believe that ATI has been irreversibly
placed as a crucial development agenda
item not just for the DPP administration but all subsequent administrations
to come. Chances are high that the Bill
will be tabled in Parliament in 2016
and Malawi will join an enviable list of
countries with legislation on ATI. MISA
Malawi has currently teamed up with a
cross section of stakeholders to push the
DPP administration to walk the talk on
ATI. The Chapter is also engaging chiefs
and people at the grassroots level to
start demanding information as a right
and engage their Members of Parliament
(MPs) to support the Bill once tabbed in
Parliament.

JOURNALIST SAFETY
President Mutharika verbally
attacks the media
The media operating environment in
2015 remained risky, exploitative and
showed serious signs of backsliding.
Media houses and journalists deemed
critical of the ruling administration were
denied access to presidential functions
and openly castigated for ‘being pro-opposition.’ Information officers in some
government departments were ordered
to ‘stop talking to the media’ and some
mainstream media practitioners were
threatened with arrests for carrying stories critical of the elite.
During a press conference held at Kamuzu Palace in the capital Lilongwe On
October 8, 2015, President Arthur Peter

38

So This is Democracy? 2015

Mutharika lambasted and labelled the
media ‘liars, irresponsible and agents of
the opposition’.
President Mutharika’s outbursts followed
a string of articles and news bulletins
criticising the size of the President’s entourage, hiring of a private jet and the
level of expenditure incurred during his
trip to the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York. The President asked for an apology from some
media houses over these stories and fell
short of specifying what action he would
take should the apologies not come forward. Mutharika’s Press Secretary, Gerald Viola, joined the fray and attacked
one unspecified radio station, accusing
it of having a hidden agenda against the
DPP government.
A few weeks after this development,
MISA Malawi received reports that Zodiak Broadcasting Station (ZBS), one of
Malawi’s renowned national radio stations in the country, was being sidelined
and denied access to some Presidential
functions.
Such developments clearly demonstrated that government was being intolerant
of CSOs and media outlets critical of the
ruling DPP led administration. All in all,
however, the year in question saw the
media and selected CSOs fiercely defend their spaces of freedom by strategic
networking with both domestic and international advocates.

BROADCASTING
The shortlived evolution of the
Malawi Broadcasting Corporation
Developments in the broadcasting sector during the period under review also
show that Malawi takes a step forward
and a step backwards.

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