Malawi's Mutharika sworn in for second term as president

Arthur Peter Mutharika, the newly elected seventh president of Malawi, holds a Bible as he takes oath of office from the Chief Justice of the Malawi Supreme Court, Justice Rezine Mzikamanda shortly after his inauguration at the Kamuzu stadium in Blantyre, Malawi, October 4, 2025. REUTERS/Eldson Chagara

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Malawi's Peter Mutharika vowed to root out government
corruption and rebuild an ailing economy after he was sworn in on Saturday for
a second term as president of the southern African nation.
Mutharika, 85, secured more than 56% of votes last
month, defeating outgoing president Lazarus Chakwera, 70, who took 33%. Voters
rejected Chakwera after five years of worsening economic crisis in one of the
world's poorest countries.
The September 16 vote marked the fourth presidential contest
between Mutharika and Chakwera.
Mutharika took the oath of office in a stadium in the
commercial city of Blantyre packed with supporters dressed in the Democratic
Progressive Party's blue and white colours, as well as government officials and
African heads of state.
In his inaugural address, he said his administration was
inheriting a country in economic crisis.
Malawi is facing acute food shortages, cost-of-living
pressures, and a lack of foreign exchange that has crippled businesses and led
to persistent fuel shortages, he said.
"There is no money in government. Borrowing is
extremely high, and nobody knows where the borrowed money has gone," he
said.
But he pledged improvements, saying: "We will fix this
country."
"I don't promise you milk and honey. I promise you hard
work, tough and painful decisions," he said. "The honeymoon of
looting government is over!"
Mutharika also appealed to the international community for
investment. He addressed U.S. President Donald Trump directly, saying he would
soon send a delegation to America to discuss his country's prospects,
especially after cuts in U.S. foreign aid.
Chakwera's Malawi Congress Party said in a statement that
although the outgoing president was absent from the inauguration, he wished
Mutharika success and good health.
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