Dr. Saulos Klaus Chilima was a formidable Vice-President, a patriotic citizen who served his country with distinction—President Chakwera

Chilima had just returned from Africa-Korea Summit where he had talks with Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol

* I consider it one of the greatest honours of my life to have had him as my deputy and counsellor for the past four years

* His passing is a terrible loss to his wife Mary, his family, his friends, his colleagues in Cabinet

* And to all of us as a nation that found his leadership and courage a source of inspiration

By Duncan Mlanjira

President Lazarus Chakwera was visibly shaken as he stood behind the lectern; he took a deep breath and went on to confirm the worst fears Malawians had when it was reported that the missing plane that carried Vice-President Saulos Klaus Chilima was found and that he was dead along with all other nine people on board.

He was with nine others, including former First Lady Shanil Dzimbiri, former wife to former President Bakili Muluzi; Lukas Kapheni, Chisomo Chimaneni, Dan Kanyemba, Abdul Lapukeni and the crew, Colonel Sambalopa; Major Selemani and Major Aidin.

We carry the speech verbatim:

Fellow Malawians; the Malawi Defence Force Commander has informed me that the search and rescue operation I ordered to find the missing plane that carried our Vice-President and nine others has been completed and the plane has been found.

And I am deeply saddened and sorry to inform you all that it has turned out to be a terrible tragedy. The search and rescue team has found the aircraft near a hill in the Chikangawa forest, and they found it completely destroyed, with no survivors, as all passengers on board were killed on impact.

Words cannot describe how heartbreaking this is, and I can only imagine how much pain and anguish you all must be feeling at this time, as well as how much pain and anguish you all will be feeling in the coming days and weeks as we mourn this terrible loss.

I also know that going through a terrible loss like this makes us feel helpless and lost, as death has a way of reminding us that we do not have control over so many things that affect our lives and those we love.

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We feel helpless because we know that the people who perished in this tragic and terrible accident could have been any one of us, and we feel helpless because a day like today reminds us that one day and any day death will in fact come for each one of us and we will be powerless to stop it.

That aircraft is an aircraft I myself has used on similar trips, an aircraft that others had used just the day before, and an aircraft that the crew had operated successfully just hours before.

And yet despite the track record of the aircraft and the experience of the crew, something terrible went wrong with that aircraft on its flight back to Lilongwe, sending it crashing down and killing everyone on board and leaving us all devastated and asking ourselves questions whose answers cannot take away the pain and helplessness we feel from this loss.

I know that it is natural for the pain and helplessness this tragedy causes to make us feel angry because we feel hurt and wounded, and I want you to know that I understand these feelings because I feel them too.

So because we are all feeling these things, it is important that we comfort each other now and in the weeks to come as we mourn together.

Dr. Saulos Klaus Chilima was a good man, a devoted father and husband, a patriotic citizen who served his country with distinction, and a formidable Vice-President.

I consider it one of the greatest honours of my life to have had him as my deputy and counsellor for the past four years, and his passing is a terrible loss to his wife Mary, his family, his friends, his colleagues in Cabinet, and to all of us as a nation that found his leadership and courage a source of inspiration.

Chakwera and Chilima on their campaign trail

Chakwera and Chilima attended many national functions together

Chakwera and Chilima launching the national
cleanup campaign

Chilima hands on assisting disaster victims

And I know that even the others who were on that flight were men and women of honour who served their country with distinction and whose families are left with broken hearts today.

I am profoundly sorry to all of you for this terrible loss, and I pray for God to comfort us all and bind up our wounds as we mourn together as one nation under one flag.

I want to thank Commander Phiri and his MDF team for working through the night under difficult weather conditions to find the remains of our loved ones.

The MDF is already in the process of bringing the remains to the Capital, and later today my office will announce the arrangement that have been made for laying our beloved Vice-President and the others to rest in a dignified manner worthy of the cherished place they had in our lives and in our nation.

At Malawi Sports Awards

Chilima on the golf course

I must also thank all former Presidents of Malawi for the solidarity they expressed to me when I called each of them to inform them of the terrible news, because it is in times like this that we must stand together as one people and I will be counting on their support to unite us during the days of mourning that lie ahead.

But more than anything, I am deeply sorry to all of you for this terrible loss, and I humbly ask you all to observe with me a minute of silence in honour of their memory.

May their souls rest in peace.

The day before, Sunday June 9, the Vice-President had just returned home after successfully attending the Korea-Africa summit which was held on June 4 and 5 in Seoul, Republic of Korea.

Chilima being welcomed back home by fellow plane crash victim Shanil Dzimbiri

Among other engagements during the summit, Chilima had an audience with Korean Prime Minister, Dr Han Duck Soo and former United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, who now heads the Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI), an intergovernmental organization supporting and promoting sustainable economic growth in developing countries which currently has 48 member states.

With former UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon

Chilima also had an interaction with Malawians living in South Korea on a number of developmental issues on the sidelines of the Summit that provided an opportunity for Malawi to engage with Korean government officials and the private sector towards win-win solutions that will build up an equal and strategic partnership between the two countries.

Attended by more than 50 heads of state and government, the Summit also provided an opportunity and foundation for deepening diplomatic relations between two countries.—Additional info by Malawi Government official Facebook page

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