Who is Joyce Band? | |
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Joyce Banda, who rose to prominence as a relentless
women's rights advocate, has become Malawi's first female head of
state after the death of Bingu wa Mutharika, the country's president.
Banda, who has had to navigate the country's turbulent political
waters in recent years, took office on Saturday after Mutharika
died following a cardiac arrest. The late president had tapped Banda as his deputy in the 2009 elections, but then ousted her from his party the following year.
Banda steadfastly resisted Mutharika's efforts to force her from
office during a succession battle sparked when the late
president decided to groom his brother Peter to become his Democratic
Progressive Party's (DPP) candidate in 2014 polls. Then, as head of her own People's Party, she emerged as one of
Mutharika's fiercest critics, lambasting his management of an economy
hobbled by fuel shortages.
Banda was born on April 12, 1950, in Malawi's colonial capital of
Zomba. She began her career as a secretary and soon became a well-known
public figure.
Banda started a women's empowerment programme, travelling throughout
the country to promote the National Business Women Association, a
campaign that made her one of Malawi's most visible champions of gender
equality. She later established the Joyce Banda Foundation to advance education for girls.
Rise to power
Banda entered politics in 1999, during Malawi's second democratic
elections. She won a parliamentary seat in the party of then-president
Bakili Muluzi, who named her minister for gender and community services.
Five years later, she retained her seat as a candidate for Muluzi's party, even as Mutharika won the presidency. When the new president split from Muluzi to form his own party, the DPP, Banda followed and became foreign minister in 2006. During her time as Malawi's top diplomat, the country severed its long ties with Taiwan and established relations with Beijing. Banda argued the switch would bring economic benefits to Malawi.
China has since built Malawi a new parliament in the capital Lilongwe,
where Banda was sworn into office as president on April 7.
Mutharika tapped her as his running mate in the 2009 elections, but
their political honeymoon was short as party in-fighting intensified
over his decision to anoint his brother as his successor, drawing
accusations that he was trying to create a dynasty.
"The chronic disease of third term, or chieftaincy, remains one of
the greatest enemies of our efforts to achieve sustainable development,"
she said.
"The country is constantly caught in a vicious circle of
privatisation of the state where one or two people hold the fate of the
country."
Banda's ousting from the ruling party angered many urban voters, and she remained a popular figure for many Malawians. But, her critics have questioned her ability to steer the country
through its economic crisis, with the currency trading on the black
market at twice the official exchange rate.
After anti-government protests broke out in July last year, when
police shot dead 19 people, Banda warned that Malawi could face more
unrest ahead of the next polls.
"The road to 2014 will be rough, bumpy and tough. Some will even sacrifice their own lives," she said.
Banda remains a role model to many women in Malawi for her fight for her gender in a male-dominated society.
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Sunday, 8 April 2012
Joyce Banda becomes Africa's second female president
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