While some opposition parties are busy fighting over who should be presidential candidate and who deserves which empty title in imaginary alliances, President Lazarus Chakwera is out here delivering real deals, real jobs, and real hope for Malawians.
Yes, you heard it — while others are recycling tired slogans and tired candidates, Chakwera has quietly signed a titanium mining deal with China, a game-changer that could inject life into our economy.
The agreement, signed on June 16, 2025, between the Government of Malawi and Chinese tech and mining giant Hunan Sunwalk Technology Group, sets the stage for large-scale extraction of titanium from Salima. Even better, the deal includes building a modern mineral processing plant right here in Malawi. That’s not politics. That’s progress.
This is all part of President Chakwera’s ATM strategy:
Agriculture, Tourism, and Mining — a bold, homegrown economic blueprint. And it’s working. While others waste time trying to cling to expired political glory, Chakwera is busy securing investments that will bring jobs, increase exports, and reduce poverty.
And no — this is not one of those “sign today, vanish tomorrow” types of deals we used to hear about. According to Mining Minister Dr. Ken Zikhale Ng’oma, this partnership passed serious environmental and social impact checks. We’re not just digging holes; we’re building a sustainable future.
Let that sink in: a sitting president is turning rocks into revenue, while the opposition is turning press conferences into pity parties.
What’s more, Hunan Sunwalk CEO Hou Xingwang called the deal a “win-win” — bringing in capital, high-tech machinery, and skilled workers. Translation? Malawi will soon stop being a spectator in the global mining industry and become a serious player.
Meanwhile, the opposition — bless them — are still obsessed with who gets to be second vice president in an alliance that no one wants. It’s like arguing over wedding cake before even getting a date.
This mining breakthrough is just one example of the serious leadership Malawians deserve to keep beyond 2025. President Chakwera is proving every day that he isn’t just in office — he’s at work. And come September, the choice will be clear: stick with a visionary or gamble on expired promises.