Malawi’s electoral chief resigns ahead of election rerun

Ansah has been the target of protests calling for her resignation over her handling of last year’s disputed election.

AFP Photo Document reference 000_1IC0Y6 SLUG MALAWI - POLITICS - ELECTION - DEMO Creation date 7/4/2019 City/Country Lilongwe, Malawi Credit AMOS GUMULIRA / AFP File size/pixels/dpi 11.69 Mb / 2500 x
A protester holds a banner in 2019 against the Malawi Electoral Commission (MEC) chairperson Jane Ansah during a demonstration by opposition supporters [File: Amos Gumulira/AFP]

Malawi Electoral Commission (MEC) chief Jane Ansah has stepped down with just a month to go before the country holds a court-ordered presidential election rerun.

The southern African country must hold fresh polls after the Constitutional Court overturned the results of last year’s controversial election, which handed President Peter Mutharika a second term.

Ansah has since been the target of nationwide protests calling for her to go over her handling of the disputed election.

“I have written the appointing authority [the president] that I have decided to step down,” she told state broadcaster in an interview.

Leading human rights activists had been planning a fresh wave of protests next week to force Ansah to step down. Ansah denied she was giving in to pressure.

“I have fought a good fight and I go happy,” she said.”I have worked with clean hands and I have no skeletons in my cupboard.”

Ansah’s resignation comes exactly a year after the last elections which were annulled by the top court due to widespread irregularities and use of correction fluid.

The court ordered that a fresh election be held within 150 days of its February 3 ruling.

The electoral commission had initially set July 2, which was day 149 since the ruling, but has since brought the date forward to June 23.

Human rights defender Gift Trapence welcomed Ansah’s resignation.

“This is what Malawians have been wanting all along,” Trapence told AFP news agency.

“But we also want all the commissioners to go so that a new MEC can be constituted to allow the country to hold free and credible elections.”

Source: AFP