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non-USA, by Country
· Malawi

Tobacco poison surrounds child workers  

Jump to full article: Times Of London (uk), 2009-11-15
Author: Dan McDougall in Lilongwe

Intro:

The children pick through mountainous piles of waste tobacco and sweep it up with their bare hands into giant bags in the hope of scraping a living. From behind a veil of dust, they stare back at us with bloodshot eyes.

As the wind gathers in a fading dusk, infant siblings strapped to their mothers' backs wail amid swirling, noxious clouds of tobacco.

Beyond them, a parched maize plantation stretches into the distance towards the factory buildings of Alliance One, the world's largest tobacco processor and the source of up to 30% of the premium tobacco enjoyed by Britain's 13m smokers.

A Sunday Times investigation in the southern African state of Malawi has uncovered an environmental travesty that is being inflicted by the tobacco industry on some of the continent's poorest people.Downstream from the tobacco processing plants that dominate the outskirts of Lilongwe, the Malawian capital, rivers run yellow and green from industrial outflow -- water used for bathing by villagers who have no other option.

Even more alarming, however, is that in a community already plagued by Aids, cholera, malnutrition and one of the highest infant mortality rates in the world, toxic tobacco waste is being dumped by contractors in open landfill sites where hundreds of children are picking through the remnants. . . .

This weekend a spokesman for the American-owned Alliance One said the company would build a wall round the landfill site to keep out children. He said: "We believe that we meet all environmental and other regulatory requirements in Malawi, but we are happy to work further with local authorities to further safeguard children from exposure at the municipal disposal site."

Few benefits from the tobacco industry filter down to Malawi's poor tobacco farmers who eke out a hopeless existence on less than 80p a day.

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Categories
· Health/Science
· Agricultural
· Teen Smoking/Youth
· Nicotine
non-USA, by Country
· Malawi

Child tobacco farmers 'exposed to toxic levels of nicotine' 

Jump to full article: CNN, 2009-09-25
Author: Olivia Sterns For CNN

Intro:

* Children can absorb up to 50 cigarettes worth of nicotine on wet days

* Wearing gloves, washing clothes or bathing would all reduce exposure and risk

* Green Tobacco Sickness 'feels like death,' induces headaches, nausea

* Report reveals widespread abuse of child workers, withheld wages, violence . . .

Hundreds of thousands of children worldwide are thought to be working full-time on tobacco farms, suffering from toxic levels of nicotine exposure and abusive labor conditions.

Children as young as five-years-old work on tobacco farms in Malawi, according to Plan International.

In Malawi alone there are an estimated 78,000 boys and girls employed in tobacco harvesting. On average they earn 17 cents for a 12-hour day of back-breaking, bare-handed work, according to a recent report from Plan International.

Handling burley tobacco leaves without gloves, in unwashed clothes and rarely bathing, these children can absorb the same amount of nicotine in one day of harvesting that they would from smoking 50 cigarettes. . . .

Today UNICEF, the ILO, Plan and others all remain active in Malawi, working with the government to develop links between the ministries of labor and agriculture to end child labor on tobacco farms.

Since the report came out in August, Plan International told CNN in an email that "the government has been constructive in their response and are discussing/looking to work with Plan to conduct a national survey to gauge the true scale of the issue and better enforcement of existing child labor laws."

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Categories
· Agricultural
· Business (Tobacco)
non-USA, by Country
· Malawi
Organizations
· UVV

Malawi Deports Universal, Alliance Tobacco Officials (Update3)  

Jump to full article: Bloomberg News, 2009-09-09
Author: Frank Jomo

Intro:

Malawi, the world’s largest burley tobacco producer, said it will deport officials of Alliance One Inc. and the local unit of Universal Corp. for paying below government-mandated prices for the leaf.

“This is the action I have taken,” President Bingu wa Mutharika said in a speech broadcast live on the state-owned Malawi Broadcasting Corp. radio station today. “They have been defying my orders to pay better prices and I have decided to chase them.”

The government yesterday revoked temporary work permits for officials of Alliance One, Universal-unit Limbe Leaf Tobacco, and Premium Tama Tobacco Co., and issued them with 24-hour deportation orders. . . .

Malawi started setting minimum prices for the various grades of tobacco two years ago after it accused merchants of putting farmers out of business. While dealers denied that they underpaid farmers, Wa Mutharika on April 6 threatened to deport buyers if prices didn’t improve.

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Categories
· Health/Science
· Agricultural
· Teen Smoking/Youth
non-USA, by Country
· Malawi

Hard work, long hours and little pay / Research with children working on tobacco farms in Malawi (PDF) 

Malawi tobacco report 2009
Jump to full article: Plan International (uk), 2009-08-23

Intro:

Multinational tobacco companies have slowly and surely been shifting their production from the fields of the United States to developing countries in a bid to cut costs. This shift has seen a massive drop in U.S tobacco production – to a point where 75% of production is now found in developing countries.

While this change should mean more employment and greater benefits for the local economy, this is not always the case. Despite the profits of the multinational companies, local tobacco farmers continually struggle to break even. This leads them to look for ways to cut costs and means more children are being exposed to exploitative and hazardous working conditions.

While the tobacco companies obviously profit from these reduced labour costs, children in Malawi receive just 17 U.S cents (11 pence) for 12 hours of unrelenting work.

As one of the world’s largest tobacco producers, Malawi is reliant on the tobacco industry for its national income and thousands of children, some as young as five, work in the fields to support their families. Through original participatory research, Plan has gained an insight into the realities of their lives.

As well as long hours and little pay, children revealed that they suffer physical and sexual abuse from their supervisors, regularly have their pay withheld and are unknowingly blighted by the effects of Green Tobacco Sickness. (GTS)

The emotional and physical impact that these conditions have on their wellbeing is immense. As well as the long-term psychosocial effects of abuse, the hazardous working conditions could seriously impair their development.

GTS is a poisoning found in workers who cultivate and harvest tobacco and is exacerbated by rain or dew on the crop.* On humid days the average field worker may be exposed to as much as 54 mg of dissolved nicotine – the equivalent to more than 32 average cigarettes.

“Numerous animal studies have shown that administration of nicotine during childhood and adolescence produces long-lasting changes in brain structure and function, as well as behavioral changes, that are not seen when nicotine is administered to adults. Thus the brain of a child or adolescent is particularly vulnerable to long lasting adverse neurobehavioral effects of nicotine exposure.” . . .

Executive summary

Malawi has the highest incidence of child labour in southern Africa. 88.9% of the children in the age group 5-14 work in the agricultural sector, where tobacco estates are highly represented. The number of children working on tobacco farms in Malawi has been estimated at 78,000 although the actual number is thought to be much higher.

Previous research gives some information on the different activities children are engaged in on tobacco farms, some information about the hazards children face and some understanding of why children are involved in this work. But very little work has been done with children themselves to find out how they experience and understand the work they do or to find out what children see as the best form of intervention.

For this reason Plan Malawi decided to undertake this participatory study. The research will be used to inform the work Plan and its partners in Malawi are doing to raise awareness of child labour on tobacco farms, to advocate for changed conditions and to develop interventions for the affected children.

The research approach was a participatory one in which 44 children (aged 12-18)

from three districts across Malawi (Lilongwe, Kasungu and Mzimba) took part in a series of workshops. All of the children had worked full-time on tobacco farms during the 2007/2008 season. 16 were working full-time on tobacco farms at the time of the research and 18 part-time. The children worked on a range of different farms from large estates to small family farms. All worked outside their own families. Parents and para-civic educators were also consulted.

The workshops, which were carefully constructed to take into account ethical issues, included drawing, mapping, storytelling and discussion. All of the discussion was recorded and transcribed and this formed the data which was analysed using thematic analysis. The findings are presented under the set of themes that emerged from the analysis.

Hard work, long hours and little pay

The children did the full range of tasks on the farms; there was no differentiation between work done by children and adults. Most of the children worked for 12 hours a day though some worked for much longer. Apart from the break for lunch (usually the only meal of the day) there were few breaks. The unrelenting nature of the work was one of the issues raised by the children. Children reported that the work was often too hard for their size and that they often had pay deducted if they did not finish the work given for that day.

The average daily wage earned by the children in the study was MK26 (USD0.18), reportedly less than that of adults. The children reported often being paid according to the work they did and some had worked with parents to help parents finish their quota of work.

One of the issues that concerned children was that they were often paid less than the amount they were promised at the beginning of the season. Most reported that the money they earned was not enough to meet the needs at home that had motivated them to seek work in the first place.

Why we are working

The main reason children gave for working was poverty at home. Lack of food, clothes and the need to mend their houses as well as the need for fertiliser and seed

iii

for their family farms were common needs at home. School fees (for secondary school) and school needs were also common reasons given for working.

It was clear that it was the children themselves who chose to work because of the situation at home. In fact many of them expressed a strong sense of responsibility toward their families, particularly those living with aging grandparents, or ill or disabled parents.

One significant finding is that though the criteria for selecting the children did not include vulnerability (para-civic educators were told to find ‘children who were working on tobacco farms’) it emerged that a large majority of the children came from elderly-headed households or orphan households. 22 of the children in the sample were double orphans and 12 were single orphans. This suggests that children from vulnerable families are more likely to be involved in child labour.

Abuse from supervisors

Children reported physical abuse in the form of beating (with a stick and hand) and kicking from supervisors. Supervisors also withheld food and used verbal abuse, often related to their orphan status.

Sexual abuse was also widely reported. Supervisors used their power to force girls to have sex in exchange for more money, food and late arrival at work. Girls reported that if they lived at the farm they slept apart from their parents and owners or supervisors came to rape them at night. This issue was raised by boys who felt angry at their powerlessness to do anything, and by girls who were clearly afraid, often thinking about what was in store for them on the way to work. Girls also reported that very few girls talked about this issue.

Impact of work on children

Apart from aching muscles caused by work that was too hard for them and the beatings they experienced the children reported a number of troubling physical symptoms. Health problems that are related to lack of access to soap and water and time to bath were commonly reported.

Symptoms of Green Tobacco Sickness were widely reported . . .

Recommendations

A set of recommendations around advocacy, public education and direct intervention for working children is included in the report. These include the need to use the information in the report to inform advocacy around poverty alleviation, particularly in relation to vulnerable households. The report provides powerful stories that can be used to lobby for stronger punishment for those who break labour laws and employ children and to lobby for more effective implementation of the labour laws that do exist.

The report also provides evidence for use in advocacy programmes around access to schooling generally and the need for programmes to help working children who wish to return to school. The need for research into school models that cater for working children is another recommendation raised in the report.

A set of recommendations is made in relation to the health status of working children.

These include access to health services, particularly testing for TB and HIV.

A number of recommendations are also made around public education. These include the need to educate the general public about vulnerable children and the need to care for them rather than to discriminate against them. Education around child rights for children and for adults should also be a priority. Para-civic educators are a potential resource for education campaigns at local level. This public education needs specifically to include programmes for children who are not working about children who are working.

Mechanisms that allow children to report abuses at work and programmes that offer psychosocial support for working children should be a priority.

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Categories
· Health/Science
· Agricultural
· Business (Tobacco)
· Teen Smoking/Youth
non-USA, by Country
· Malawi

Malawi child tobacco workers exposed to nicotine 

Jump to full article: AP, 2009-08-23
Author: RAPHAEL TENTHANI (Associated Press Writer)

Intro:

Young tobacco pickers in this southern African country are exposed to "extremely high levels of nicotine poisoning," a London-based children's rights organization said in a report released Monday.

"As the tobacco industry continues to shift its production to developing countries, more vulnerable children are being exposed to these hazardous working conditions," said a report by Plan International. "It is estimated that over 78,000 children work on tobacco estates across Malawi, some up to 12 hours a day, many for less than 1.7 cents an hour and without protective clothing."

The report, entitled "Hard work, little pay and long hours," asserts that child laborers, some as young as five, suffer severe symptoms from absorbing "up to 54 milligrams a day of dissolved nicotine through their skin", the equivalent of an average of 50 cigarettes a day. . . .

Companies such as Philip Morris International said they do not own farms in Malawi, but they purchase tobacco from suppliers in the country.

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Categories
· Agricultural
· Business (Tobacco)
· Class/Income Levels
non-USA, by Country
· Malawi

Growing tobacco without puffing benefits  

Jump to full article: Africa News (nl), 2009-08-07
Author: FRAZER POTANI

Intro:

tobacco dates to 1800s according to a Guide to Blantyre published by Malawi 's Department of Tourism in the 1980s.

No wonder that since attaining independence from Britain in 1964, Malawi's economy still depends on the leaf.

However, while Malawian estate owners and international multinational tobacco firms have been reaping from tobacco, ordinary Malawian estate workers have not been benefiting, Frazer Potani reports from Malawi.

Ganizani Benjala cannot remember his age, however, recalls that for 48 years has been doubling as a tobacco tenant and watchman at Zanzi Estate in Mitundu, Lilongwe.

But despite working in the two jobs for this long period what Benjala has is a rusty bicycle bought 12 years ago. . . .

He said every tobacco sales season his benefits are eaten away by inflated hefty monetary deductions including food and medical costs by the estate's management.

However, Zanzi Estate Manager Naphtali Samson Banda said management gives food accessibility to tenants a priority.

"Our estate 226 hectares and we have 6 tenants, 60 direct laborers who are on monthly pay roll and 12 indirect labour working as temporary workers. To make sure that our tenants are food secure, apart from providing them with food, each tenant was allocated a piece of land for growing tobacco and maize," said Banda.

He further disclosed that his estate allocates a bigger area for growing maize for food than the land for growing tobacco to its tenants.

"We can not produce more high quality tobacco when our tenants and workers in general have no food," he said. . . .

Tobacco Tenants and Allied Workers Union of Malawi (TOTAWUM) Secretary General for the central region of Malawi, Edson Gideon said his organization was receiving many complaints from tobacco tenants. . . .

The Centre For Social Concern (CFSC) in Lilongwe however, said its research reveals that despite that tobacco production is associated with economic development, employment provision, and contributes over 70 per cent of Malawi's foreign exchange growers are becoming poorer.

It says the powerful forces behind Malawi's tobacco dependent economy are US subsidiaries Limbe Leaf, Stancom and Dimon which together purchase over 95 percent of the tobacco crop and sell it to global cigarettes firms like Phillip Morris and British American Tobacco.

It further says results reveal that the prices of tobacco prevailing on the auction floors have been generally declining over the last few years.

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Categories
· Agricultural
non-USA, by Country
· Malawi
Organizations
· WHO: FCTC

Malawi to continue relying on tobacco  

Jump to full article: Daily Times (mw), 2009-05-05
Author: Thom Khanje

Intro:

Malawi will continue to promote tobacco production until viable alternatives are identified, Principle Secretary for Agriculture Andrew Daudi has said.

He was speaking at Sunbird Livingstonia Hotel in Salima where he officially opened an annual meeting of the International Tobacco Growers Association - ITGA for African tobacco growing countries.

Daudi said although Malawi appreciates efforts by the World Health Organization (WHO) to regulate tobacco production and marketing through the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control due to health risks associated with smoking, the country could not just abandon tobacco production overnight because of its significance to the economy and people's livelihood in the country.

He urged the WHO to actively engage government of tobacco growing countries as well as grower associations in finding proper means of addressing the problems of tobacco. . . .

The meeting in Salima has brought together participants from Malawi, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Mozambique, Kenya and Uganda. The ITGA was founded in 1983 to advance the interests of tobacco growing countries in the world.

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Categories
· Agricultural
· Teen Smoking/Youth
· Cessation
· Tobacco Control
non-USA, by Country
· Zimbabwe
· Malawi
· Africa
· Zambia

Quit Smoking for Africa 

Jump to full article: SOS Children's Villages (uk), 2009-05-01

Intro:

SOS Children is launching a new campaign asking smokers to "quit for Africa".

"Even though everyone understands the health benefits" said ex-smoker and fundraising director Kathie Neal "giving up smoking is a long and painful haul which requires sticking power. Knowing that the money you save is directly helping children alone could really help".

Even if they buy some cigarettes abroad, smoking ten cigarettes a day typically costs a smoker between £60 and £120 a month, the same as the cost of 3 to 6 child sponsorships. SOS Children suggests that to increase the satisfaction of quitting and help smokers to celebrate their ongoing achievement they use just 60p a day, a small part of this saving, to sponsor a child in Zambia, Zimbabwe or Malawi, tobacco-growing areas of Africa. SOS Children helps children throughout Africa

"The actual benefit to the African worker from a tobacco smoker is tiny, since the losers when you quit smoking are mainly the tax man and tobacco companies (who get most of the money from cigarettes" explained SOS CEO Andrew Cates "but nonetheless it seems appropriate to give something back to the countries which will lose the export".

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Categories
· Agricultural
· Business (Tobacco)
· Teen Smoking/Youth
non-USA, by Country
· Malawi

Child Labour Threatens Tobacco Market 

Jump to full article: All-Africa.com, 2009-02-11
Author: Singayazi Kaminjolo The Tribune (Blantyre)

Intro:

Auction Holdings Limited Malawi, has called on tobacco farmers to stop using children in their farms.

The company's General Manager Evance Matabwa said this practice of using children to work in tobacco estates is against international labour laws.

"Children are not supposed to work in farms and estates. As Auction Holdings, we are against this practice and we are appealing to farmers to desist from it, not only because it is wrong, but it is also against international labour laws," Matabwa said.

He said the use of child labour in tobacco farmers was ruining the reputation of the country, and scaring away buyers.

"Child labour is prohibited on the international trade.

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Categories
· Agricultural
· Business (Tobacco)
· Teen Smoking/Youth
· Op-Ed
non-USA, by Country
· Malawi

MKWAMBISI: Of child trafficking and child labour in Malawi 

Tobacco estates biggest culprits of child labour in Malawi
Jump to full article: NyasaTimes.Com, 2008-07-28
Author: David Mkwambisi, PhD

Intro:

Over the last few months, we have been involved in several studies on child labour, child trafficking and other issues affecting orphans and vulnerable children in Malawi. Covering almost three quarters of the country, we have a larger picture of what child labour is at national level. The stories we have uncovered are so pathetic, the conditions pitiable and wretched, the work involved is abject.

I stand on this forum to share with the reader the stories as per the studies, the strategies and programmes undertaken by individuals and organisations. I will then bring to the attention of policy makers what is lacking on our agenda before suggesting some strategies that we need to embark on to assuage these sufferings.

Children as young as 10 years are engaged as child labourers mostly in tobacco estates in Mzimba, Rumphi, Mangochi, Kasungu and Mchinji. These future leaders of Malawi are trafficked from Mulanje, Thyolo, Lilongwe, Dedza, Salima and Ntcheu. . . .

The government could express more commitment by approving some of the bills and policies aimed at reducing this problem. Bold and new anti trafficking legislation is required and consider the introduction of child registration as a priority for child protection. Capacity building for law enforcers is required including those in immigration and courts. Let the communities be involved including the children themselves in programme planning and policy formulation. Referral networks by stakeholders could be enhanced at national and community level.

Finally, the President, cabinet, heads of department could take a reading role in raising awareness on this social problem. Otherwise, we will have 6,500,000 child labourers rather than Section 65. See my tears.

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Categories
· International
· Teen Smoking/Youth
· Advertising/Promos
non-USA, by Country
· Nigeria
· Malawi
· Africa
· Mauritius
Organizations
· BAT

Critic's choice - This World: Duncan Bannatyne Takes on Tobacco (BBC2) 

Jump to full article: Electronic Telegraph (uk), 2008-07-02
Author: Matt Warman

Intro:

Entrepreneur and Dragons' Den hardman Duncan Bannatyne explores the lamentable world of tobacco advertising in the developing world.

He visits Mauritius, Nigeria and Malawi, investigating the sales strategy of British American Tobacco - a company which made a £2.1billion profit last year.

Bannatyne believes he's found evidence that suggests BAT is breaking its own code of conduct about the accessibility of cigarettes to children, and after researching the situation in each of the three African countries, he returns to London to confront BAT with his findings.

However, Bannatyne fails to create a sense of urgency, even though he talks to people who started smoking at the age of nine.

The programme looks at length at what young Africans know about the dangers of smoking, and finds that some schoolchildren smoke because they believe it "makes them wise".

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Categories
· International
· Business (Tobacco)
· Teen Smoking/Youth
· Advertising/Promos
non-USA, by Country
· Nigeria
· Malawi
· Africa
· Mauritius
Organizations
· BAT

British American Tobacco denies breaking youth code on cigarette sales 

Jump to full article: AFX News, 2008-06-30

Intro:

Tobacco giant British American Tobacco PLC has denied claims made by a BBC investigation that it is breaking its code regarding the sale of single cigarettes, seen as more attractive to child smokers.

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Categories
· International
· Business (Tobacco)
· Teen Smoking/Youth
· Advertising/Promos
non-USA, by Country
· Nigeria
· Malawi
· Africa
· Mauritius
Organizations
· BAT

Tobacco giant 'breaks youth code' 

Jump to full article: BBC Online, 2008-06-28

Intro:

covering the sale of cigarettes to young people in Africa.

An investigation for the BBC has found evidence in Nigeria, Malawi and Mauritius of rules being broken.

In particular, BBC Two's This World found single cigarettes - which campaigners say are attractive to young people - were being promoted and sold.

The company involved, British American Tobacco (BAT), says it does not encourage the sale of single "sticks".

During the investigation carried out for BBC Two's This World programme, British businessman Duncan Bannatyne also discovers tactics used by BAT which circumvent bans on advertising and raise the profile of cigarettes in countries where doctors are warning of a potential epidemic of smoking-related diseases.

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Categories
· Health/Science
· Agricultural
· Business (Tobacco)
non-USA, by Country
· Malawi

Tobacco industry stands firm on DDT  

Jump to full article: Daily Times (mw), 2008-05-15
Author: HENRY MCHAZIME

Intro:

Major players in the tobacco industry in the country have stressed that the re-introduction of Dichloro-Diphenyl-Trichloroethane (DDT) by the health sector to curb malaria would threaten sales of tobacco on the global market.

This follows Ministry of Health interest in 2006 to bring back DDT which is one of the known synthetic pesticides to be used in the country to halt reproduction of mosquitoes which spread the killer disease.

During a media briefing in Salima on Sunday Executive Director for Agricultural Research and Extension Trust (Aret) Ibrahim Phiri said chances for DDT contamination to tobacco remain very high in rural areas where tobacco is mostly grown.

"As an industry we have been consulted on the use of DDT especially in rural areas where malaria is wrecking havoc but there is a conflict here as health officials are trying to protect us from this killer disease while we are looking at protecting the country's major forex earner from being shunned on the international market," said Phiri.

He added that Malawi's tobacco may be threatened if the country accepts DDT re-introduction as there would be scepticism on whether the leaf is pure.

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Categories
· Agricultural
· Business (Tobacco)
· Teen Smoking/Youth
· Philanthropy/Funding
· Class/Income Levels
non-USA, by Country
· Malawi

Tobacco firm assigns K400m for Malawi schools 

Jump to full article: Daily Times (mw), 2008-04-28
Author: DICKSON KASHOTI

Intro:

An international tobacco firm, Philip Morris, has set aside K400 million (US$3 million) for the construction of 100 school blocks across the country in the next five years, starting this year, to help improve Malawi's education standards.

The US based tobacco company, which also buys Malawi's leaf, has already channeled K7 million to Total Land Care, a local NGO which would be executing the project in conjunction with district assemblies and education official among others.

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Malawi
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