THE president of one of Africa's most impoverished countries has been living it up on a luxury Gold Coast holiday.
Malawi's Bingu wa Mutharika spent ten days in the opulence of a Sovereign Islands holiday home which costs $5600 a week to rent, before flying home this week.
The land-locked nation of Malawi is rife with AIDS and the average adult earns less than $1 a day.
For most of the population, many meals consist of grasshoppers or termite larvae.
One in 10 children never makes it to adulthood, while the average life expectancy is just 41.
However, those problems must have seemed a world away for Mr Mutharika, who stayed at Valencia, a super-luxury holiday home on the exclusive islands at the northern end of the Coast.
Sovereign Islands is one of the Gold Coast's most luxurious addresses, and Valencia is one of the estate's most glamorous rental properties, and is frequently hired out by celebrities.
Many of the Gold Coast's rich and famous live at Sovereign Islands, including motor racing legends Dick Johnson and Russell Ingall.
Valencia boasts huge living areas, state-of-the-art audio-visual equipment, Natuzzi leather lounges, a designer kitchen, swimming pool and private jetty.
The mansion's five double beds are fitted with 500-thread count sheets.
The place costs about $11,000 a week to rent in the high season.
Mr Mutharika stayed with his wife and a 12-man entourage, including security guards, cooks and administration staff.
He also received an Australian taxpayer-funded police escort to and from Brisbane airport.
Mr Mutharika came to office in the troubled nation in 2004 and has since made many enemies by pledging to stamp out corruption.
However, the president himself has been accused of corruption, a heavy-handed approach to media outlets that oppose him, and a cavalier approach to human rights and police brutality.
A former director of trade in the United Nations, he has been an enigmatic figure since returning to politics in Malawi.
Several journalists were arrested after last year reporting the president was refusing to sleep in the state mansion because he believed it was haunted.
He denied the reports.
Earlier this year he hosted former US President Bill Clinton, who visited Malawi to sign an agreement for an aid work project.
Mr Clinton and Scottish sporting goods magnate Sir Thomas Hunter are pouring money into the country to help victims of AIDS and HIV.
Valencia owner Kym Illman said his high-profile guest had seemed like 'a pretty good bloke'.
"He was a lovely fellow," he said.
"He seemed pretty down-to-earth and he said his favourite part of the trip was catching a fish on the back jetty."
He said Mr Mutharika had stumbled across the spectacular Valencia property on the internet and decided he 'had to' stay there.
"He just decided he wanted to come to Australia and started looking at accommodation," he said.
"He hadn't really settled on a particular part of Australia, but he saw Valencia and decided he would come here."
Sovereign Islands residents said their short-term neighbour had been a fairly quiet guest.
"They were pretty low-key," said one neighbour. "They had the odd limo pull up and there were security guards there, but they were pretty quiet and weren't really drawing attention to themselves."
There has been some controversy over Mr Mutharika's trip to the Gold Coast, with Malawi's Nation Online website reporting the government had declined to provide information regarding the president's Australian visit.
The country's opposition criticised the trip to Australia for 'lacking transparency'.
The president's allegedly extravagant ways have come in for a barrage of criticism over the years.
While signs were first emerging that Malawi was about to face an acute food shortage, the Mutharika administration ordered three state-of-the-art limousines from Germany.
Last year he was accused of commissioning dozens of portraits of himself at a cost of almost $1.25 million.
And the Sovereign Islands mansion, while grand, pales when compared to the president's official residence at home a sprawling, Persian-style, 300-room complex built by a former dictator.
A spokesman for the federal police said they could not provide details of a police escort given to Mr Mutharika to and from Brisbane airport.
A spokesman for Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Alexander Downer said he was unaware of any official functions being held during Mr Mutharika's visit.
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For have I now become your enemy for telling you the truth?-Galatians 4 v16.
Do they expect him to stay in a bed and breakfast? He's a bloody Head of State!
I never hear anyone telling the Queen to sell one of her many palaces to house the homeless people in London. This to me is just one of the ways that the west uses to demonise Africans now that overt racism is not politically correct. This is also apparent anytime you see articles of stories about King Mswati. How he has several wives while his country is ravished by AIDS.
Western hypocrisy sickens me. The truth is the average Malawian reads this, complains and gets on with their lives. The rural people really don't give a monkeys whether Bingu has a jet or lives in the Astoria..
As much as Bingu is entitled to all sorts of luxity,we need to know where he is and for what purpose.He should not forget that we are the voters and his bosses.
For the expenses,I feel the western media blows the issues just to get favours from international NGOs like the UN or WB.They think africans dont desrve nice things,let alone the presidents just because their countries are poor,I doubt if a poor man would live 365 days without coming a cross a party and taste a beef.Let them shut down their nostrils.
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If Iam not for myself,who will be for me?And if Iam only for myself,what am I?
This is one stupid report. If you consider that $5600 (US$ or A$?) for a week comes to $800/night and in this case, covers a presidential entourage of 12 (which is actually quite small), I'd say the president should be commended 4 being very frugal. And why is the police escort to and from the airport an issue? As far as I know, that's standard procedure anywhere and it hardly sounds extravagant.
where should this man stay?ine azungu andikola sometimes i wonder who gave them the full of beans attitude and go unpunished.i bet some of the people in australia thought bingu was seeing magetsi for the first time.they need double dose of prozac to kick out their "am looking out for them(africans) attitude"
this is bollocks press from the ausies,i know Bingu is no saint,but the man is the president for bollocks sake,so they expect our president to live like the flipping crocodile hunter to be bitten off by stingreys or what?this man doesnt come from the gutter,he serves the people of malawi and can only answer to them,not some stupid journalist giving him bad press,thats unheard of.
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all i have is my word,and i dont break it for nobody.
i know Bingu is no saint,but the man is the president for bollocks sake,so they expect our president to live like the flipping crocodile Hunter?
But he is quick at pointing fingers. Isn’t he the same person who accused the former President of abusing Government funds? I could have given him a credit, if he could have looked for the cheapest Resthouse!