GUY SCOTT NAMED AS ACTING LEADER AFTER DEATH OF PRESIDENT MICHAEL SATA OF ZAMBIAN
Africa has its first white head of state since apartheid after the death of the
charismatic Zambian president dubbed 'King Cobra'.
Vice president Guy Scott was named the
country's acting leader today ahead of a presidential election in three months
to formally replace Michael Sata, who died last night aged 77.
The last white leader on the African
continent was South Africa's last apartheid president, FW de Klerk, before
Nelson Mandela famously won the country's first true democratic elections in
1994.
Michael Sata died last night aged 77. |
Vice president Guy Scott was named the country's acting leader today |
Sata being sworn in as president in 2011. |
Guy Scott stood in for Michael Sata in a summit with U.S. President
Barack Obama in August
|
Zambia is mourning the death of Sata, a charismatic, chain-smoking father of eight who rose from being a British railway porter through decades of hard politics to become the country's president.
He left Zambia again for medical treatment on October 19 but the government had not given updates on his condition. It was suggested he may have had a heart condition.
He died last night at the private King Edward VII's hospital in Marylebone, central London.
His wife Christine Kaseba-Sata and Lusaka's mayor Mulenga Sata - one of his eight children - were at his bedside when he died.
British foreign secretary Philip Hammond
said he was saddened to hear of Mr Sata's death, adding: 'He played a
commanding role in the public life of his country over three decades, as
governor of Lusaka, as the holder of several ministerial positions in the
1990s, as the main opposition leader, and finally as president.
'I would like to offer my condolences to
his family and to the Zambian people at this time.'
Zambian cabinet secretary Roland Msiska
urged the public to 'remain calm, united and peaceful during this very
difficult period'.
culled from dailymail.uk
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