• Home
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Saturday, May 2, 2026
The Atlas Malawi
  • Home
  • National
  • Education
  • Health
  • Features
  • Politics
  • News
    • Business
  • Entertainment

    A Million eyes watching but no bread on the table: Malawi’s creators harvesting likes but reaping poverty

    NBM supports ‘Onesimus vs Armstrong’ concert with K5m

    Standard Bank hikes ATEM sponsorship to K35m

    Dalitso Chaponda leaves Malawi in stitches with electrifying farewell show

    EU Delegation, Music Crossroads Malawi to celebrate young musicians at 2025 Directors’ Merit Awards

    Gibo, Bwede lit up NBM Championship launch party

  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • National
  • Education
  • Health
  • Features
  • Politics
  • News
    • Business
  • Entertainment

    A Million eyes watching but no bread on the table: Malawi’s creators harvesting likes but reaping poverty

    NBM supports ‘Onesimus vs Armstrong’ concert with K5m

    Standard Bank hikes ATEM sponsorship to K35m

    Dalitso Chaponda leaves Malawi in stitches with electrifying farewell show

    EU Delegation, Music Crossroads Malawi to celebrate young musicians at 2025 Directors’ Merit Awards

    Gibo, Bwede lit up NBM Championship launch party

  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Features

ADP ratification key to addressing attacks against persons with albinism

Mana by Mana
January 12, 2023
in Features
0
ADP ratification key to addressing attacks against persons with albinism
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Aliko Munde:

As most people think of sleeping at night, some evil minded people think of taking away some people’s lives.

In Malawi, persons with albinism feel insecure to go to bed for fear of being attacked or murdered by agents of Satan simply because of a skin condition.

The recent attack and murder is that of a three-year-old innocent girl Talandira Chirwa who was mercilessly stabbed on the neck and chopped off the arm and the assailants went away with it.

It was on fateful day of November 30, 2022 around 23:00 hours, when Talandira was sleeping on the same bed with her grandmother when an unidentified monster forcibly broke into the house and stabbed her and went away with the girl’s arm.

As people are busy working hard to earn a living and live a better life, some people still think that they can get rich by simply taking away life of a person with albinism.

People with albinism in Malawi face numerous human rights abuses such as abductions, killings and mutilations of body parts on the assumptions that their nature boasts of magical powers.

Nkhata Bay based primary school teacher, Nyakondowe fears for her life and that of her two other siblings who have Talandira’s skin condition.

The 27-year-old Nyakondowe, says her house is not well secured and evil minded people can one day attack them.

“After the attacks on persons with albinism started in the country, communities started patrolling our area to curb the inhumane and barbaric behavior,” Nyakondowe says.

Malawi government has taken various measures to end such attacks. In 2019, it distributed mobile personal security alarms to the countrys estimated 10,000 persons with albinism.

It also offered cash rewards of up to $7,000 to anyone who have information about abductions and killing of such people.

It also put in place strategies to curb the malpractice by developing the National Action Plan on Persons with Albinism in Malawi (2018-2022).

Some international Human Rights bodies have spoken against attacks on persons with albinism. The United Nations previously warned that people with albinism are at risk of extinction in Malawi where they are attacked and murdered in cold blood.

Amnesty International called on the authorities in Malawi to improve the protection of persons with albinism across the country following the killing of three-year-old Talandira Chirwa and other attacks in recent years.

According to a National Police Report, in 2021, four cases were recorded and there was no one who was killed. All cases were to do with grave tampering and being found with human bones.

In 2022, one person was killed. A three-year-old Talandira Chirwa in Kasungu. The remaining six were to do with people tampering with graves and some who were found with human tissue especially bones.

African Charter on Human and People’s Rights- Disability Rights Protocol popularly known as The African Disability Protocol (ADP) is one such a legal framework in which African Union member states are expected to formulate disability laws and policies to promote disability rights in their countries in an African localized context.

The protocol addresses and encompasses specific issues such as customs, traditional
beliefs, harmful practices and the role of the family, caregivers and community members.

It also deals with community-based rehabilitation and minority groups within the African
disability community, including people with albinism.

It is the only International Human Rights instrument that expressly recognizes the plight of Persons with Albinism most especially the attacks they face.

The protocol was adopted in 2018 as the Disability Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights (Banjul Charter). It will come into effect only after it is signed and ratified (made legally binding) by 15 member states of the African Union.

Federation of Disability Organizations in Malawi (FEDOMA) Project Manager Ethel Kachala Chibwana stresses on the need to have the protocol ratified as the protocol is one of the ways in which issues of Human Rights are owned and advanced by Africans themselves.

“This is a great opportunity for us as Africans with disabilities to enjoy disability rights to the fullest as the protocol has been developed based on unique disability needs and experiences to our continent,” Chibwana explains.

You might also likePosts

Nine years of providing clean water to communities – the story of Pacific Limited

April 28, 2026

A Million eyes watching but no bread on the table: Malawi’s creators harvesting likes but reaping poverty

March 15, 2026
Rise in Covid-19 cases worry health commentator

Is Malawi’s new HIV prevention strategy enough to end the epidemic by 2030?

March 7, 2026

She further says it is high time that as a nation we set the pace for other countries to follow. “This progressive thinking, by signing and ratifying the protocol, will demonstrate to the world on our serious resolve to deal with violations of rights of persons with disabilities in general and those with albinism in particular.”

Malawi is one of the countries on the continent that have signed but are yet to ratify the protocol.

John Kabaghe, Spokesperson in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, says the country is not failing to ratify the ADP instead, it is subjecting the instrument to internal procedures in the run up to ratification, since such a process cannot be done haphazardly.

Kabaghe says the process requires thorough and complete consultations and clearance to ensure that all stakeholders are able to comply with the obligations, both legal and financial, of any such an international legal instrument.

“The ministry is working towards ADP ratification within the first quarter of 2023,” he says.

Kabaghe further says Malawi has a robust legislative framework to combat the killings of persons with albinism.

He says: “You will recall that the Penal Code was amended to specifically address these issues. The judicial system is able to successfully prosecute cases pursuant to such laws”.

Malawi is also a Party to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) which upholds international standards on the protection of persons with disabilities, including persons with albinism.

Kabaghe, however, says joining the ADP should definitely enhance Malawi’s collaboration and cooperation in Africa on the protection, promotion and fulfilment of the rights of persons with disability in the region.

One of the organisations that has been promoting the ratification of the protocol is Sight Savers International (SSI).

SSI is doing this through the “Equal World Campaign”. It is working with partners in Ghana, Malawi, Nigeria, Senegal and Sierra Leone to campaign for the ratification of the
protocol.

Bright Chiwaula Sight Savers Malawi Country Director, says there has been sensitisation for Organisations of Persons with Disabilities (OPDs) about the ADP such that they have secured an interest among OPDs to advocate for the same from an informed position.

“We have engaged the government together with other partners. And the government seems to be committed to ratifying the protocol. As a process to ratification the state president signed the protocol early last year,” he says.

Chiwaula says his organisation reviewed the protocol in-conjunction with the government as part of the ratification process and found that it is in line with the governments agenda.

“By not ratifying the ADP it means that some specific disability challenges and issues in the African context are still not being addressed fully thereby subjecting some people with other types of disabilities to continuous harmful behaviours by the society,” he says.

ShareTweetShareSend
Previous Post

Artists challenged to embrace digital platforms

Next Post

Kajoke joins Silver Strikers

Mana

Mana

Next Post
Kajoke joins Silver Strikers

Kajoke joins Silver Strikers

Sponsored

ADVERTISEMENT

Facebook Page

ADVERTISEMENT

Twitter Handle

Tweets by MalawiAtlas
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Court denounces Katapila, use of bouncers as debt collectors

July 4, 2025
MACRA gets injunction against new DStv tariffs

MACRA loses case against Multichoice Malawi

December 1, 2023
Sana Cash and Carry to maintain old prices

Sana Cash and Carry to maintain old prices

November 11, 2023
Civil servants threaten to down tools

Unions body demands a 44% minimum wage increment

November 10, 2023

“Legal frameworks knowledge on age of consent on access to SRHR services key for health workers’

96
Civil servants threaten to down tools

Unions body demands a 44% minimum wage increment

73
Ku Mingoli Bash on as organizers regret Onesimus’ actions

Ku Mingoli Bash on as organizers regret Onesimus’ actions

43
Court saves Salima Sugar boss Kosamu

Court saves Salima Sugar boss Kosamu

38

Trapped by a promise: How pension fund delays pushed Amaryllis seller to the brink

May 1, 2026

Gender Ministry hails TNM Mpamba for transforming Social Cash Transfers in Mangochi

May 1, 2026

NBM commits K317 Million for Malamulo Hospital power project

May 1, 2026

NBM launches online account opening platform

May 1, 2026

About Us

The Atlas is one of Malawi’s most established, reliable and impartial publications, that does not subscribe to the principles of any political party or pressure group. It takes a no-holds-barred approach in its reporting and strives to always keep authorities and others involved in public initiatives on their toes.

At The Atlas, we believe in and fervently pursue ethical journalism, and we resist any attempt to tilt our work towards interests of particular individuals or entities.

Follow Us

Trending this week

Authorities in emergency talks as tobacco rejection rates hit 100 percent 

by Chrispin Lwanja
April 29, 2026
0

...

ADP ratification key to addressing attacks against persons with albinism

ADP ratification key to addressing attacks against persons with albinism

by Mana
January 12, 2023
0

...

Recent Posts

Trapped by a promise: How pension fund delays pushed Amaryllis seller to the brink

by Contributor
May 1, 2026
0

...

Gender Ministry hails TNM Mpamba for transforming Social Cash Transfers in Mangochi

by Contributor
May 1, 2026
0

...

  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

© 2023 The Atlas Malawi -All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • National
  • Education
  • Health
  • Features
  • Politics
  • News
    • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports

© 2023 The Atlas Malawi -All Rights Reserved