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Monday 01 June 2026 14:56:07 GMT
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꧁༒☬•Samir•☬༒꧂ :
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POOR MAN PUNISHED. BIG THIEVES WALK FREE. This case from Ntcheu District should anger people. Not because the law was applied. But because of how it is applied. A man. Two bags of charcoal. A bicycle. No permit. That is the full weight of his crime. The court fines him K400,000 or one year in prison. That is not small money. That is survival money. That is food. Rent. School fees. Now face the hard truth. This is not about justice. This is about power. Look at the imbalance. • A poor man cuts trees to survive • He is caught fast • He is prosecuted fast • He is punished hard Now compare that to what people see every day in Malawi. • Millions disappear from public funds • Reports are written and ignored • Cases drag for years • No prison. No repayment. No urgency This is where the system breaks trust. The law is supposed to be blind. In reality it is selective. Yes. Charcoal production without permits damages forests. That matters. Environmental protection is real. But enforcement without fairness creates anger. You cannot punish survival and ignore corruption. You cannot chase bicycles and ignore luxury vehicles bought with stolen money. You cannot jail a man for two bags of charcoal while others steal millions and negotiate settlements. That is not law. That is imbalance. The man even admitted guilt. He asked for mercy. He supports a family. An elderly mother. The system heard him. Then still chose the harsh route. Ask the real questions. Where is proportional justice? Where are the same fast courts for corruption cases? Where is the same urgency when public money is looted? Where is the same punishment scale? This is why people lose respect for the law. Because it feels like the law is strongest where resistance is weakest. Poor people do not have lawyers. They do not delay cases. They do not negotiate. They pay. Or they go to prison. That is efficiency without justice. Malawi needs consistency. If environmental crimes are punished this fast, then financial crimes must be punished faster. If K400,000 is the cost of two bags of charcoal, then what is the cost of stealing millions? Say the number. Enforce it. Until then, cases like this will not be seen as justice. They will be seen as targeting the poor. This judgment should trigger debate across Times 360 Malawi and beyond. Not to excuse illegal charcoal. But to demand equal law. Equal speed. Equal pain. Because without that, the system is not protecting the country. It is protecting inequality.
POOR MAN PUNISHED. BIG THIEVES WALK FREE. This case from Ntcheu District should anger people. Not because the law was applied. But because of how it is applied. A man. Two bags of charcoal. A bicycle. No permit. That is the full weight of his crime. The court fines him K400,000 or one year in prison. That is not small money. That is survival money. That is food. Rent. School fees. Now face the hard truth. This is not about justice. This is about power. Look at the imbalance. • A poor man cuts trees to survive • He is caught fast • He is prosecuted fast • He is punished hard Now compare that to what people see every day in Malawi. • Millions disappear from public funds • Reports are written and ignored • Cases drag for years • No prison. No repayment. No urgency This is where the system breaks trust. The law is supposed to be blind. In reality it is selective. Yes. Charcoal production without permits damages forests. That matters. Environmental protection is real. But enforcement without fairness creates anger. You cannot punish survival and ignore corruption. You cannot chase bicycles and ignore luxury vehicles bought with stolen money. You cannot jail a man for two bags of charcoal while others steal millions and negotiate settlements. That is not law. That is imbalance. The man even admitted guilt. He asked for mercy. He supports a family. An elderly mother. The system heard him. Then still chose the harsh route. Ask the real questions. Where is proportional justice? Where are the same fast courts for corruption cases? Where is the same urgency when public money is looted? Where is the same punishment scale? This is why people lose respect for the law. Because it feels like the law is strongest where resistance is weakest. Poor people do not have lawyers. They do not delay cases. They do not negotiate. They pay. Or they go to prison. That is efficiency without justice. Malawi needs consistency. If environmental crimes are punished this fast, then financial crimes must be punished faster. If K400,000 is the cost of two bags of charcoal, then what is the cost of stealing millions? Say the number. Enforce it. Until then, cases like this will not be seen as justice. They will be seen as targeting the poor. This judgment should trigger debate across Times 360 Malawi and beyond. Not to excuse illegal charcoal. But to demand equal law. Equal speed. Equal pain. Because without that, the system is not protecting the country. It is protecting inequality.

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