President Lazarus Chakwera freed 37 prisoners during Malawi's 61st Independence Day celebration. The government kept the names secret and refused to tell people who walked out of jail. Officials said they picked inmates who served half their time and those who were sick or old. They promised no murderers, rapists, or armed robbers got early release. Critics blasted the secrecy and demanded answers about who benefited from the presidential mercy.
Earlier this year, controversial names appeared on pardon lists that shocked the public. Misozi Chanthunya killed his Zimbabwean girlfriend Linda Gasa and went to prison for murder. His old father begged for mercy but prison guards said no way because the crime was too brutal. Pika Manondo and Macdonald Kumwembe tried to assassinate a budget official during the massive Cashgate scandal. They wanted out because of health problems and court delays after their partner Ralph Kasambara died on bail.
Lin YunHua created the biggest uproar when his name surfaced on pardon papers. The Chinese man got 14 years for smuggling wildlife and breaking environmental laws. Anti-corruption investigators discovered he was running businesses from behind bars and living outside prison illegally. They rushed to court and blocked his release with emergency orders. The case exposed serious problems with how Malawi runs its jails and justice system.
Government ministers refuse to say if these famous criminals received pardons or stayed locked up. The silence makes people more suspicious about dirty deals and political favors. Public trust keeps falling as officials dodge questions about their secret prisoner releases.
Earlier this year, controversial names appeared on pardon lists that shocked the public. Misozi Chanthunya killed his Zimbabwean girlfriend Linda Gasa and went to prison for murder. His old father begged for mercy but prison guards said no way because the crime was too brutal. Pika Manondo and Macdonald Kumwembe tried to assassinate a budget official during the massive Cashgate scandal. They wanted out because of health problems and court delays after their partner Ralph Kasambara died on bail.
Lin YunHua created the biggest uproar when his name surfaced on pardon papers. The Chinese man got 14 years for smuggling wildlife and breaking environmental laws. Anti-corruption investigators discovered he was running businesses from behind bars and living outside prison illegally. They rushed to court and blocked his release with emergency orders. The case exposed serious problems with how Malawi runs its jails and justice system.
Government ministers refuse to say if these famous criminals received pardons or stayed locked up. The silence makes people more suspicious about dirty deals and political favors. Public trust keeps falling as officials dodge questions about their secret prisoner releases.