Here's an article from the Guardian:
Prominent women's rights campaigner Joyce Banda was
sworn in as Malawi's
president on Saturday, becoming southern Africa's
first female head of state and raising hopes for a fresh start in the small,
poor nation after the death of her predecessor. Banda, a 61-year-old
policeman's daughter who has won international recognition for championing the
education of underprivileged girls, had served as vice president under Bingu wa
Mutharika, who died on Thursday following a heart attack. She succeeds him
under the terms of the constitution.
Aid-dependent Malawi had slid into economic crisis
over the last year, as Mutharika, a professorial but temperamental former World
Bank economist, squabbled with major western donors who then froze millions of
dollars of assistance. Banda took the oath of office on Saturday in the National
Assembly in the capital, Lilongwe, as flags flew at half mast in mourning for
Mutharika, whose death was only officially announced by Malawi's government on
Saturday.
"I want all of us to move into the future with
hope and a spirit of unity," Banda said amid loud applause and singing.
The two-day delay in the official announcement of
Mutharika's death had raised worries that there could be a power struggle.
Banda had been expelled from his ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP)
party in 2010 after an argument about the succession, though she retained her
state position. But fears of a political crisis in the landlocked former
British colony receded as top officials and the army backed the handover of the
presidency to Banda. In a sign that she has support across the political
spectrum, opposition leaders had called for her to be sworn in as head of state
swiftly, and 20 members of the national governing council of Mutharika's DPP
also expressed their backing for her. Banda said she had already held a
"good meeting" with Mutharika's cabinet. Malawians, many of whom had
viewed Mutharika as a stubborn autocrat, appeared to welcome their first female
president.
"We now have a female president, this to me is
the greatest day because she is a mother and a mother always takes care of her
children," said Alice Pemba, a vendor in Lilongwe.
"She will be able to do a good job and surmount
the challenges to work with the IMF and World Bank and win back the donor
support which we need," said a local businessman who gave his name only as
Tiyazi. Earlier, Banda appeared at a news conference to dispel fears of a
succession struggle and declare 10 days of official mourning for Mutharika, who
had ruled since 2004. "I call upon all Malawians to remain calm and to
keep the peace during this time of bereavement," Banda said, flanked by
members of the cabinet, the attorney general and the heads of the army and the
police. "As you can see, the constitution prevails," she said. Malawi's
constitution says the vice-president takes over if the president dies, but
Mutharika appeared to have been grooming his brother Peter, the foreign
minister, as his de facto successor. Peter Mutharika did not attend Banda's
swearing-in.
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