On 16 February 2026, President Peter Mutharika signed Executive Order No. 1 of 2026, prohibiting all public health workers from owning, operating, or holding shares in private clinics, pharmacies, or hospitals, and outlawing informal payments in public facilities.
The order came within 48 hours of a collaborative undercover investigation, published on 14 February, that documented alleged bribery and extortion across seven major public hospitals, including Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre and Kamuzu Central Hospital in Lilongwe.
Patients at these facilities were reportedly charged between MK 4,000 and MK 260,000 for services that are legally free of charge.
Within weeks, the High Court in Lilongwe suspended enforcement and granted health workers leave for judicial review, ruling that the decree could not take effect while a full constitutional challenge was pending.
What began as a domestic hospital scandal had become a stress test for Malawian constitutionalism, donor-dependent health financing, and the politics of executive power in a country already grappling with debt distress and climate shocks to its agricultural base.
Hospital ombudsmen in Malawi’s public facilities recorded more than 16,000 complaints in 2025, of which 238 related specifically to irregular payments, according to the Ministry of Health.
Those figures formed the backdrop for the February media investigation, which described what reporters characterised as a coordinated system of informal charges in busy referral hospitals, ranging from small facilitation payments to sums exceeding Malawi’s monthly minimum wage.
In response, the executive order gave public health workers 30 days to divest from any private health business or face dismissal and possible criminal prosecution, while reaffirming that all public services must be provided free of charge.
The timing lends weight to the government’s stated rationale: that the directive aimed to sever conflicts of interest thought to incentivise staff to divert patients toward their own private facilities.
Critics, including former High Court judge Dunstain Mwaungulu, argued that Malawi already possesses sufficient statutory tools to prosecute extortion and bribery through the Penal Code, the Corrupt Practices Act, and the Public Service Act.
A stand-alone executive order is, on this reading, not only legally questionable but also strategically unnecessary, he noted.
Malawi’ s 1994 Constitution draws a sharp and deliberate line between presidential directives and laws enacted by Parliament.
Mwaungulu also noted that an executive order cannot, on its own authority, create new criminal offences or alter employment conditions that contradict existing legislation without clear enabling authority.
The applicants in the High Court case, doctors Aubrey Milinda, Davie Kalulu, and Wellington Chipofya, contend that the order is ultra vires on three grounds: that it effectively legislates by decree, that it discriminates against a single category of public servant, and that it interferes with economic rights without affording due process.
Justice Howard Pemba’s interim injunction does not rule on those substantive claims.
It accepts, however, that they are serious enough to merit full judicial review and that implementing the decree before that review is complete would cause irreparable harm to the affected professionals.
The government, for its part, argues that it is acting within its executive mandate to protect patients and public resources, and that the ban targets a self-evident conflict of interest in a context of widespread illegal fees.
Behind the legal arguments lies a workforce crisis that is both severe and longstanding.
Malawi has approximately 600 registered doctors serving a population of roughly 20 million, a ratio of one doctor for every 33,000 people, compared with the World Health Organization’s benchmark of one per 1,000.
A December 2025 WHO assessment found vacancy rates of 40 percent for nurse-midwife technicians and 32 percent for medical officers and specialists in the public sector.
The Christian Health Association of Malawi (CHAM), a network of mission-run facilities, provides approximately 37 percent of national healthcare services and employs more than 13,000 staff, illustrating the degree to which the state already depends on non-governmental partners to sustain basic coverage.
This structural fragility has historically driven migration.
By 2002, an estimated 59 percent of Malawian-trained doctors were practising abroad. The government’ s 2005 Emergency Human Resources Programme, which introduced salary top-ups of around 52 percent for priority cadres, was a direct response to that haemorrhage.
Around 2003, authorities formally permitted dual practice for doctors as a deliberate retention strategy, allowing them to hold public posts while engaging in regulated private work.
Doctors associations argue that this arrangement has functioned as a de facto wage supplement and a critical incentive to keep experienced clinicians, particularly specialists, from accepting regional or international offers.
Comparative evidence from Uganda and Sierra Leone further suggests that outright bans can push clinicians out of government service and, counterintuitively, increase informal payments rather than eliminate them.
The debate over private practice cannot be separated from Malawi’s acute funding constraints. External partners finance approximately 55 percent of total health expenditure, with domestic public spending contributing around 24 percent and private spending 21 percent.
On-budget per capita health spending is estimated at between USD 16 and USD 19 per year, far below the roughly USD 86 per capita the WHO has cited as a minimum benchmark for basic universal coverage.
The health share of Malawi’s national budget has slipped from 12.2 percent to 9.2 percent in recent years, retreating further from the 15 percent Abuja Declaration target that African Union member states endorsed in 2001.
A rigid ban on dual practice, enforced before alternative incentives are secured, risks prompting resignations or emigration among senior clinicians.
A regional hospital losing even a handful of specialists means longer surgical queues, reduced diagnostic capacity, and greater reliance on clinical officers for complex cases.
For the government, the erosion of experienced staff risks weakening donor-funded programmes from HIV treatment to maternal health, with potential downstream consequences for performance-based financing instruments.
The order’s political logic reflects multiple, sometimes conflicting, constituencies. For the presidency, a decisive response to the illegal-fees expose offers a visible anti-corruption posture at a time of broad public discontent.
For public health workers, however, it concentrates hardship on a single profession. Other civil servants who operate side businesses, including retail shops, farms, or consultancy firms, are not subject to any comparable blanket prohibition.
This asymmetry raises direct questions under Section 20 of the Constitution, which prohibits discrimination on grounds that include occupation.
Doctors’ unions have responded by endorsing the crackdown on bribery while contesting the method, emphasising due process and the critical need to distinguish illegal extortion from lawful, taxpaying private work.
Malawi’ s confrontation over dual practice speaks to a broader dilemma facing African governments seeking to demonstrate control over frontline services without undermining constitutional norms or alienating the skilled professionals their systems cannot afford to lose.
Several Southern African Development Community member states, including Zambia and Mozambique, face analogous pressures: medical brain drain, persistently low health budgets, and rising public frustration over chronic drug stock-outs.
As debt servicing claims a growing share of national budgets and climate shocks compound fiscal stress, the temptation to reach for headline-generating executive action against perceived corruption will intensify.
But Malawi’s High Court injunction sends a clear signal that, at least for now, the judiciary is prepared to scrutinise such moves, insisting that anti-corruption campaigns remain anchored in statute and constitutional protections rather than in executive discretion alone.
A presidential order banning doctors from private practice has ignited a constitutional showdown, exposing the dangerous gap between anti-corruption politics and the hard economics of a health system that is already running on empty