Mera Board resigns, snubs parliamentary hearing

Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 15 January 2026
📘 Source: MWNation

Malawi Energy Regulatory Authority (Mera) Board members, who the Public Appointments Committee (PAC) of Parliament summoned to appear before it today over alleged incompetence, have snubbed the invitation. Instead, the members have each written Chief Secretary to the Government Justin Saidi, notifying him about their decision to resign from the board effective January 12 2026. In the letters, the board members, Charles Kambauwa as chairperson, Tobias Chinkhwangwa as vice-chairperson, John Gift Mwakhwawa, Olivia Mchanju Liwewe, Bernadette Kalumo, Kettie Mkandawire and MacCider Katulukira, argue that the outcome of the scheduled hearing was predetermined.

The development follows a letter PAC chairperson Felix Njawala wrote the members on January 9 2026 informing them that OPC had requested the committee to confirm their removal on grounds of incompetence. The PAC chair said the incompetence was in relation to the execution of their duties, which resulted in gross mismanagement of the board’s affairs and poor corporate governance practices. But before meeting PAC, the board members have individually written Saidi, distancing themselves from the allegations and informing him of their decision to step down.

In his letter to Saidi dated January 12 2026, Kambauwa said he was appointed Mera Board chairperson in April 2025 and served for only a few months before the September 16 2025 General Election. As such, he argued that it is factually and practically impossible that he could have been responsible for, or contributed to, any alleged long‑standing mismanagement or governance failures at the institution. Reads the letter in part: “Any suggestion that I was incompetent in the performance of my duties as a board member is wholly unfounded and, with respect, untenable.

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“Notwithstanding the above, it is evident from the government’s own actions—specifically, the appointment of a new board prior to formally removing the current one—that the decision to replace the board had already been made.” Kambauwa argued that it serves no meaningful purpose for them to appear before the committee to respond to allegations whose outcome appears predetermined. “In order not to waste the committee’s time or my own, I hereby resign as a member of the Mera Board with immediate effect. “Consequently, I will not be attending the scheduled hearing before the Public Appointments Committee,” further reads the letter. In a brief interview yesterday, Kambauwa confirmed that the whole board had resigned.

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📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by MWNation • January 15, 2026

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