| [Malawi] Malawi Holds Risk and Gender Training with Support from AU, COMESA and International IDEA |
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| Last updated 2025-06-23 |
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Malawi Holds Risk and Gender Training with Support
from AU, COMESA and International IDEA ![]() The Malawi
Electoral Commission (MEC) held a three-day capacity-building workshop in
Lilongwe, supported by the African Union (AU), COMESA, and International IDEA,
aimed at strengthening electoral risk management and addressing gender-based
violence in elections. This initiative comes as the country intensifies
preparations for the 16 September 2025 General Election. Speaking at the
official opening of the “Protecting Elections Workshop: Risk Management And
Addressing Gender-Based Discrimination And Violence In Electoral Processes” MEC
Chairperson Justice Annabel Mtalimanja emphasized that the training is both
“timely and urgent,” given the growing complexity of electoral challenges in
Malawi and the region. “We are determined
to deliver a process that is credible, transparent, inclusive, peaceful, and
trusted by the Malawian people,” she said. “And we cannot do this without
addressing the threats posed by gender-based discrimination and
election-related risks.” Justice Mtalimanja
used the platform to highlight the often invisible yet widespread issue of
gender-based violence in electoral processes. She stressed that such
violence—whether physical, psychological, or economic—can severely deter women,
youth, and marginalized groups from participating in elections as voters,
candidates, or electoral officials. “We have seen how
women are harassed into silence or fear during election cycles,” she said.
“This cannot be allowed to continue.” The Commission is
now integrating gender-sensitive approaches into every aspect of electoral
planning, from staff recruitment to civic education and conflict mitigation. The training is
part of a larger AU-led Technical Assistance Mission to Malawi, which was
launched following a Pre-Elections Assessment Mission conducted in March 2025. The mission
recommended robust capacity-building for MEC to strengthen its readiness for
the September polls. Over 50 MEC Commissioners and senior staff, along with
other stakeholders, participated in the training that run from 16 to 18 June 2025.
According to the
AU, the workshops will be followed by a second round of support starting in
July, which will cover a range of technical areas including gender inclusion,
logistics management, electoral risk frameworks, and data-driven
decision-making. “This mission is
part of broader efforts to consolidate democracy, peace, and stability in
Malawi,” the AU noted in its official statement, adding that the initiative is
aligned with the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance and the
2002 Declaration of Principles Governing Democratic Elections in Africa. The African
Union’s partnership with COMESA and International IDEA ensures that the
technical assistance is both holistic and regionally informed. The workshops
include interactive exercises in risk mapping, conflict simulation, and policy
development, with international experts facilitating knowledge exchange.
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