Audio By Carbonatix
Malawi announced it was pulling out of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations and the 2018 African Nations Championship (CHAN) citing financial constraints and the non-availability of a national team coach.
The Football Association of Malawi (FAM) released a statement after the Malawi government refused the FA permission to hire an expatriate coach.
The FA had proposed the hiring of a foreign coach on a 50-50 cost sharing agreement with government.
After months of consultation, the government through the Ministry of Sport, rejected FAM’s proposal on financial grounds.
A meeting of the FAM executive committee then agreed that Malawi should withdraw from the two continental competitions.
“Having considered all the available options, and in accordance with required notices for withdrawal, it was further resolved that the Malawi National Senior Football team be withdrawn from CHAN Competition by 31st March, and from AFCON by 30th April 2017, due to lack of funding.”
Malawi were drawn against Madagascar in their opening match of the 2018 CHAN qualifying campaign which gets underway in April.
They were set to meet the winners of the tie between Comoros and Mauritius at home on 13 June in their first 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier.
Malawi has been without a national coach since September 2016 when Burundian Nsanzurwimo Ramadhan took charge for just one match, leading the Flames to a 1-0 victory over Swaziland in a 2017 Nations Cup qualifier.
He had taken charge following the sacking of Ernest Mtawali in July of the same year.
Malawi’s withdrawal from both the Nations Cup and CHAN is expected to attract a hefty fine from the Confederation of African Football (Caf) but FAM General Secretary Alfred Gunda said it would be better to pay the fine than remain in competitions which the country cannot afford.
‘If we are avoiding the fines then it means we should have the finances to participate which are much more huge, so with that we will look around and see how best we can pay the fines”
“We may need to negotiate on paying the fines in instalments although we know it will have to be ourselves (FAM) to foot the fines” he said.
Latest Stories
-
Today’s front pages: Monday, January 19, 2026
21 minutes -
Ghanaian family disowns relative after fraud conviction in Australia
30 minutes -
GoldBod data shows 98.8% of Ghana’s small scale gold exports went to Dubai and India in 2025
32 minutes -
Kofi Bentil says Ofori-Atta is hesitant to return over treatment, not charges
37 minutes -
GSA debunks cement price hike claims, says Jan. 19 increase is false
42 minutes -
Driver rams into robbers, foils MoMo robbery at Darkuman
47 minutes -
Smallholders at the centre: Why innovation and diversification are pivotal for Africa’s food future
57 minutes -
Plans underway to establish museum on northern Ghana’s slave history in Navrongo
1 hour -
4 killed including two children as runaway truck ploughed into Salon at Kumawu
1 hour -
Open letter to Chief Justice on judicial security, specialised prosecution and extradition
1 hour -
NACSA warns of arrests as final gun amnesty deadline approaches
1 hour -
Eastern NPP Chairman backs Bryan Acheampong for 2028 flagbearer slot
1 hour -
WEF flags unemployment as Ghana’s biggest economic threat in 2026
1 hour -
Fire guts warehouse at Ashaiman Gulf City
1 hour -
NCC urges government to revitalise Kumasi Cultural Centre ahead of major events
2 hours
