Malawi is a small and poorly known country, but the crimes committed
against its people by the brutal dictatorship of Dr Hastings Kamuzu
Banda are a part of our shared human history. It is about what happens
when governments turn state violence on their own people with impunity.
The book gives voice to Malawians who were arbitrarily imprisoned, who
fled for their lives into exile, or who suffered silently under the
regime's state-sponsored terror from 1964 to 1994. These are not easy
stories for the victims to tell and people in power do not want them to
be made public. To add to the indignity endured by the regime's victims,
Malawi's current leadership has been rehabilitating Banda's image and
honouring him, despite well-documented reports of atrocities and abuse
of human rights. Nevertheless, even unpleasant history must be openly
faced, discussed and acknowledged to provide lessons for the future. The
book helps redress this one-sided revision of Malawian history. Fifty
years after independence, the Malawi people continue to suffer in
absolute poverty and in greater numbers than ever, because the lessons
of history from Malawi's lost years have not been learned.