An official document dated December 11 from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to the Malawi Mission in London showed that Ansah is scheduled to be in Nottingham from December 26 to January 10.
There is public outrage in Malawi as Malawian Vice President Jane Ansah come under fire and intense backlash following revelations that she is travelling to the United Kingdom with a large, taxpayer-funded entourage.
This is to attend her husband’s 80th birthday celebrations, at an estimated cost of K2.3 billion (about $1.3million).
The trip, which became public knowledge on Monday morning, has sparked widespread outrage on social media and among civil society groups, with critics questioning the justification for deploying state resources for what appears to be a private family event.
This is at a time when the government is urging citizens to endure austerity and cutbacks.
An official document dated December 11 from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to the Malawi Mission in London showed that Ansah is scheduled to be in Nottingham from December 26 to January 10.
Sources familiar with the matter describe the visit as private, according to Malawian local media, Nyasa Times.
Her husband, Dr J.A. Ansah, who resides in the United Kingdom with their children, is turning 80.
However, the same document instructs the Malawi High Commission in London to notify British authorities and provide full protocol and logistical support in line with the status of the Office of the Vice President, despite the absence of any declared official or diplomatic agenda.
Public anger has been further fuelled by reports that the delegation numbers about 16 people, including two personal assistants, five security officers, protocol, medical and administrative staff, the Vice President’s brother, Bona Mjojo, and a “special guest” identified as Pastor Linnet Matope, described as a close friend of Ansah.
Critics argue that the inclusion of relatives and friends on a publicly funded trip undermines any claim of official purpose and highlights what they describe as a culture of privilege among top government officials.
“This is not a state visit. This is a birthday party,” one governance activist wrote online.
“Yet the taxpayer is footing the bill while hospitals have no drugs and families have no food.”
The controversy comes amid government-imposed austerity measures aimed at curbing public spending as Malawi grapples with a worsening economic crisis marked by food shortages, persistent fuel scarcity and chronic stock-outs of essential medicines in public hospitals.
When contacted, Vice President’s press officer Richard Mveriwa confirmed that Ansah is travelling to the United Kingdom but declined to provide further details, including the purpose of the trip or its cost to the public.
Civil society organisations have been more forthright. Centre for Social Accountability and Transparency (CSAT) Executive Director Willy Kambwandira described the trip as an abuse of public resources.
“You cannot justify spending billions of kwacha on a private celebration when Malawians are struggling to survive,” Kambwandira said.
“This kind of conduct undermines public trust and renders government austerity rhetoric hollow and dishonest.”
Economists and governance experts have warned that such contradictions between official policy and the conduct of senior leaders risk eroding public confidence, not only in political leadership but also in the country’s broader economic recovery efforts.
As citizens queue for maize, endure fuel rationing and witness the decline of public services, images of a sizeable delegation travelling abroad for an 80th birthday celebration at public expense have become, for many, a stark symbol of elite excess in a period of national hardship.
For critics, the issue now goes beyond a single trip, raising deeper questions about whether austerity measures apply only to ordinary Malawians, while those in power remain shielded from the crisis they oversee.