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One Malawi one People: What to do Post 20 July Demonstrations

I was shocked by the way events unfolded in my loved country (Malawi) yesterday. Order appeared to be slipping away and the country seemed to be treading toward some of social and political schizophrenia. Things were indeed falling apart and we were quickly losing the oneness and love that was heavily promoted in the past. I felt very angry, very upset and very resentful about all what was happening. I knew people were going to die and so some of them indeed died. We are with them in prayer and may their souls rest in peace. We also pray that the families left behind will have God’s protection and grace as we forge ahead. Some important questions about this is, how did come this far? Did we have to? How did we let this happen? Going forward, it is imperative that we do serious soul searching and leave all the blame games, concentrate on finding out the root causes of our problems at the moment, address them and forge forward. The issues of the rule of law, economic and social advanc...

The General Schlieffen Plan

"To win, we must endeavour to be the stronger of the two at the point of impact. Our only hope of this lies in making our own choice of operations, not in waiting passively for whatever the enemy chooses for us."—Schlieffen, the famous German General behind the Schlieffen plan the plan involved using 90 pct of german forces to quickly defeat france and then turn them to russia.This plan would prevent any two-front war

Malawi’s economy and the urgent need for radical structural change

Dr Greenwell C Matchaya It is a hazy Sunday morning, the neighbourhood is still quite and although I have no intention of going out just yet, part of me is miles away to Africa and the Arab world. On the BBC TV, the mass abuse of human freedoms in Yemen and Syria by the people that are supposed to protect them are conspicuous and disturbing. If only the world and the United Nation System viewed nations and leaderships in the same way, perhaps some variants of no-fly-zones would have been imposed in those countries in a bid to curb the governments’ abuses of human freedoms. Compared to the case of Libya where a no-fly-zone was suggested and subsequently implemented based on the predicted danger that the Libyan government was going to pose in Eastern Libya, the Syrian and Yemen cases are gravely serious especially when we consider that many a person is being killed every day in protest rallies. One would only hope that God and perhaps the international community will do something posit...

The long-term Terms of Trade (ToT) for Agricultural Commodities and the need for Industrialization

By Dr Greenwell Matchaya, Berkshire, United Kingdom The need for industrialization in Africa and the developing world is real, although a debate about the means through which it may be achieved, has never been settled and may not be settled anytime soon. Fortunately, it appears that whatever the sources of industrialization may be, in practice they depend on the context such that each nation’s nature and degree of resource endowments are likely to help in dictating the feasible paths for industrialization for individual economies. This is perhaps one case where the concept of ‘one size fits all’ does not appear useful. Although the actual debate on the possible options for routes to industrialization for different African nations is being considered in a future article, effort is made herein to say something that could be useful for the Malawi economy. As we may already know, the lifeblood of Malawi’s economic growth and development is mainly the Agricultural sector so that policy chan...