Friday, April 6, 2012

Reports: Malawi president hospitalized in S.Africa

FILE - In this March 8, 2005 file photo the President of Malawi Bingu Wa Mutharika poses for photographers prior to his meeting with King Albert II of Belgium at the Royal Palace in Brussels. Malawi's president was hospitalized Thursday April 5, 2012, with a heart problem, officials said. (AP Photo/Thierry Charlier, File)

FILE - In this March 8, 2005 file photo the President of Malawi Bingu Wa Mutharika poses for photographers prior to his meeting with King Albert II of Belgium at the Royal Palace in Brussels. Malawi's president was hospitalized Thursday April 5, 2012, with a heart problem, officials said. (AP Photo/Thierry Charlier, File)

BLANTYRE, Malawi (AP) ? Malawi's president is being treated in South Africa for an undisclosed ailment, state media reported Friday.

Officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to journalists had said that 78-year-old President Bingu wa Mutharika had a heart problem and was first taken to a hospital in Lilongwe, the capital. State media reported he would be moved to South Africa, which has among the best hospitals in the region, and confirmed Friday he had been transferred.

Government officials said more details will be released later Friday.

Mutharika is a former World Bank official once heralded for his stewardship of a southern African country that is among the world's poorest. In recent years, he has been accused of trampling on democratic rights.

Mutharika first came to power in a 2004 election, and was overwhelmingly re-elected five years later. Elections are not due again in Malawi until 2014.

During his first term, Mutharika persisted with a program to help farmers buy fertilizer even though Western donor nations and agencies said subsidies should be avoided in a free market. His subsidies were credited with boosting Malawi's economy.

In more recent years, the economy has stumbled, with shortages of fuel and foreign currency and high unemployment.

Anti-government demonstrations across Malawi last year were met with an unprecedented security crackdown that resulted in at least 19 deaths.

Malawi's relations with foreign donors have been strained by accusations Mutharika is authoritarian and responsible for human rights abuses. Last month, a U.S. aid agency that rewards good governance suspended $350 million worth of assistance to Malawi.

Mutharika also has clashed with politicians at home, including his own vice president, Joyce Banda. She was expelled from Mutharika's party and formed her own but remains vice president. Under the constitution, she would become president if there were a sudden vacancy at the top.

Associated Press

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