Malawi's government has clarified the details of Vice President Jane Ansah's private trip. The statement says her visit to the United Kingdom is approved for just five accompanying officers. It runs from late December into early January. Officials emphasized the budget was cut in half, covering only airfare and allowances. This reduction aligns with President Arthur Peter Mutharika's promised austerity measures since taking office.
The clarification follows public anger over leaked documents suggesting a fifteen-person delegation with much higher costs. The Vice President's office, through Press Secretary Richard Mveriwa, denied that those papers were official. They called the leaks misleading and stated they did not come from any government source.
Groups like the Human Rights Defenders Coalition have criticized the plan. They called the originally rumored delegation size deeply troubling, arguing a privately motivated visit should not use public money. This contradicts the administration's rhetoric on financial discipline, they say.
The clarification follows public anger over leaked documents suggesting a fifteen-person delegation with much higher costs. The Vice President's office, through Press Secretary Richard Mveriwa, denied that those papers were official. They called the leaks misleading and stated they did not come from any government source.
Groups like the Human Rights Defenders Coalition have criticized the plan. They called the originally rumored delegation size deeply troubling, arguing a privately motivated visit should not use public money. This contradicts the administration's rhetoric on financial discipline, they say.