Sunday, April 26, 2026

From Criminalising Begging to Organised Compassion: A City Social Protection Fund for Malawi

Recent debates around Malawi’s anti-begging law have raised an important question: Should poverty be managed through punishment, or through protection?

While concerns about public order, exploitation, and safety are legitimate, many of us may agree that begging is often not a crime of intent, but a symptom of vulnerability — hunger, disability, homelessness, illness, abandonment, or lack of opportunity.

That is why perhaps it is time to think beyond the courtroom and consider a more humane, practical alternative:

A City Vulnerable Persons Support Fund

Rather than responding to begging primarily through criminal law, Malawi’s cities could establish social protection funds to support those genuinely unable to sustain themselves, while helping others transition out of street dependence.

This would not simply be charity.

It would be organised compassion with accountability.

The Core Idea

Each city — whether Lilongwe, Blantyre, Mzuzu or Zomba — could establish a Vulnerable Persons Support Fund, supported through partnerships among:

  • City councils

  • Faith communities

  • Businesses through corporate social responsibility

  • Individual well-wishers

  • Diaspora contributions

  • NGOs and development partners

Imagine a transparent public fund where citizens can contribute through mobile money, institutions can sponsor support programs, and assistance reaches vulnerable people through a structured system rather than informal street giving alone.

Who Would It Support?

Priority support could go to:

  • Elderly persons without family support

  • Persons living with disabilities

  • Chronically ill and labour-constrained individuals

  • Homeless vulnerable adults

  • Street-connected children through protection and reintegration

  • People facing temporary destitution due to crisis

This recognizes a simple truth:

Some people are not refusing to work — they simply cannot cope without support.

Beyond Handouts: Pathways to Dignity

Support should go beyond occasional alms.

The fund could provide:

  • Emergency food assistance

  • Shelter support

  • Small cash transfers in verified cases

  • Medical and social welfare referrals

  • Skills and livelihood support

  • Reintegration assistance for those able to rebuild independence

The goal should not be dependency.

The goal should be dignity.

A Better Role for Well-Wishers

Many citizens want to help, but informal giving at intersections or streets often reaches people unevenly and can sometimes sustain exploitative systems.

What if generosity was organised?

Instead of random giving, well-wishers could contribute into a trusted city mechanism that:

  • Pools support

  • Reaches more people

  • Targets genuine need

  • Reduces abuse

  • Builds long-term solutions

That could turn private compassion into public impact.

Transparency Must Be Central

For such a fund to work, trust is everything. It should be governed by a board including:

  • City authorities

  • Social welfare officials

  • Faith representatives

  • Civil society

  • Disability advocates

  • Private sector partners

  • Independent auditors

And it should publish regular public reports on:

  • Funds received

  • Funds used

  • Beneficiaries supported

  • Administrative costs

  • Independent audits

If citizens can see where their contributions go, support can grow.

Rethinking the Begging Debate

Perhaps the debate should not be:

“Should begging be criminalised or allowed?”


Perhaps it should be:

How do we reduce street begging while protecting vulnerable people?


That is a better policy question. One can discourage exploitative or aggressive begging while also refusing to criminalise desperation. Those two things can coexist.

From Prohibition to Compassionate Policy

A powerful model could be:


Identify → Assess → Support → Reintegrate


Not merely:


Arrest → Prosecute → Repeat


Because punishment may remove people from the street for a day. Support can help remove the conditions that put them there.

A National Conversation Worth Having

Malawi has a strong tradition of community solidarity.

This proposal simply imagines extending that spirit into city-level social protection. Not just charity. Not just law enforcement. But structured compassion.


And perhaps that is the bigger opportunity hidden in this debate:

To move from managing poverty to reducing vulnerability.

To move from criminalising begging to organising compassion.

And to show that public order and human dignity do not have to be enemies.


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