Zambian founding father Kenneth Kaunda, dies at 97

Kenneth Kaunda, who became Zambia’s first president after helping to lead a peaceful revolution against colonial British rule, has died at the age of 97 after being treated for pneumonia at a military hospital in Lusaka.

Former Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda is shown speaking at the funeral of South Africa’s Nelson Mandela in 2013. © Reuters / Odd Andersen

The former president’s son, Kambarage Kaunda, confirmed his passing on Thursday. “I’m sad to inform, we’ve lost Mzee (elder),” the younger Kaunda said on his father’s Facebook page. “Let’s pray for him.”

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Zambia’s current president, Edgar Lungu, praised the founding father as a “true African icon” and said he had passed away “at a time we least expected.” Lungu declared 21 days of national mourning for Kaunda.

The charismatic Kaunda, who was known for carrying a white handkerchief in his left hand, was jailed by British colonial authorities in 1959. He was released the following year.

After becoming president of the United Party for National Development (UNIP), he organized the “Cha-cha-cha” campaign of civil disobedience to free the country, then known as Northern Rhodesia, from British control. The campaign included strikes, boycotts and protests.

Kaunda became Zambia’s first president in 1964, after winning independence, and ruled until 1991. He nationalized Zambia’s copper mines and helped other southern African countries – including Zimbabwe, Angola, Namibia, Mozambique and South Africa – achieve black majority rule. Lusaka hosted radio broadcasts by the African National Congress (ANC), while Kaunda provided the group safe haven as it fought to defeat South Africa’s apartheid system.

Amid food shortages, surging debt and rising public opposition to one-party rule, the socialist leader ended a ban on opposition parties in 1991. Kaunda was defeated by Fredrick Chiluba of the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) in Zambia’s 1991 presidential election. He peacefully gave up power, waving his white handkerchief.

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Kaunda later devoted much of his time to campaigning against HIV/AIDS, after one of his children died from the disease.

Journalist Charles Onyango-Obbo called Kaunda the “last man standing” of Africa’s independence generation. “One day, after we have contextualized his flaws, we will look kindly on him,” he said.

Source: RT Online

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