Fiona Mwale

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Born (1974-10-30) 30 October 1974 (age 51)
OccupationHigh Court judge
EmployerMalawi Human Rights Commission et al
Fiona Mwale
Mwale in 2025
Born (1974-10-30) 30 October 1974 (age 51)
EducationUniversity of Leeds, University of Warwick
OccupationHigh Court judge
EmployerMalawi Human Rights Commission et al
TitleJustice

Fiona Atupele Mwale (born 30 October 1974) is a Malawian High Court Judge. She approved Madonna's 2017 adoption of Malawian twin girls. She later used the constitution to remove a law that discriminated against a woman's evidence in sexual crimes.

Mwale was born in 1974.[1] She studied law in the UK. She graduated from the University of Leeds before she studied at the University of Warwick for a Master of Laws. She was accepted at the English bar at Gray's Inn.[1]

Mwale was the Malawi Human Rights Commission's Principal Legal Officer before she was appointed as a High Court judge in 2012.[1]

In 2019 she was one of nine women who were judges in Malawi, the others were Justice of Appeal Jane Ansah who led the Malawi Electoral Commission, Dorothy Kamanga, Ivy Kamanga, Rachel Sophie Sikwese, Annabel Mtalimanja, Zione Ntaba and Ruth Chinangwa. Justice Esme Chombo, had been involved in Madonna's adoptions, but in 2019 she was said to be just retired.[2]

In 2020 Justice Mwale was able to overturn the precedent that women are unreliable witnesses in cases of sexual crime. She was able to argue that these were discriminatory as they contradicted Section 20 of the Malawian Constitution which forbids discrimination on the grounds of sex and gender.[3] In the specific case the court had ignored the evidence in a case of a sexual attack on a child who was eleven years old[4] because they set aside the evidence because the child was female and there was no corroborating evidence. Her judgement attracted comment internationally.[5][4]

In 2023 she was given a lifetime achievement award by the Women's Lawyers Association of Malawi.[6]

In 2024 Fiona Mwale was an (unsuccessful) candidate for the UN's Committee on the Rights of the Child. She stood at the same time as Boniface Massah who was a candidate for the UN's Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.[7]

Following the 2025 election there was a number of petitions by losing candidates. Mwale rejected case number 85 in which Clement Mwale tried unsuccessfully to overturn the election of Khadija Chunga.[8]

Adoption

Private life

References

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