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Wednesday, 25 July 2007

Malawi budget vote suspended, political row deepens

Debate on Malawi's 2007/08 budget has been indefinitely suspended in a deepening political standoff between the southern African nation's president and the opposition-controlled parliament.

The United Democratic Front (UDF) and the Malawi Congress Party on Tuesday refused to debate the government's $1.2 billion budget until a dispute over the poaching of its members by the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) was resolved.

The boycott forced the speaker of Malawi's National Assembly to call suspend the session and prompted a sharp rebuke from the government of President Bingu wa Mutharika, who bolted from the UDF and formed the DPP after winning the 2004 election.

More than three dozen members of parliament have crossed the floor to the DPP. Some are now ministers in wa Mutharika's cabinet and could be forced to resign if the opposition wins its battle to strip them of their seats.

The government is currently being funded through a monthly skeleton budget.

"Their demands are ridiculous. How can they say that they are going to allow us to spend on the month-to-month basis until the speaker removes the ministers? I need a cash flow and a budget to borrow from donors," Finance Minister Goodall Gondwe said.

"We only have a week in which to spend the 11 billion kwacha which the same parliament approved. I need to buy fertilizer, but all this is not working now," said Gondwe, who is expected to request another temporary budget authorisation for August.

The deadline for passage of the budget was originally set for June 30, but the vote was delayed by the death of first lady Ethel wa Mutharika in May.

The impoverished African country has faced political upheaval since Bingu wa Mutharika fell out with his UDF colleagues after targeting officials in an anti-corruption campaign.

His establishment of the DPP in 2005 and successful attempts to lure UDF and MCP members to the new party prompted calls for his impeachment from the opposition, which has accused him of disenfranchising Malawians who voted for the UDF and MCP.

Malawi's top court upheld a ruling last month preventing the breakaway DPP members from taking their seats, but a court injunction prohibited the speaker of parliament from taking action against those who had crossed the floor.

Should its members lose their seats, wa Mutharika's party could be left with as few as five MPs in Malawi's 193-seat parliament.

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