President Frederick Chiluba insists that opposition leaders were behind a plot to overthrow his government...
Having sauntered back into State House after bitter and flawed elections (AC Vol 37 No 24) President Frederick Chiluba must now live with his unenviable inheritance: a tottering political system a growing foreign debt burden and a weak economy weakened further by a foreign aid boycott (AC Vol 37 No 25)...
Elsewhere in the Southern African Development Community the economic news is generally better while political developments are more fluid – notably in Zambia after President Frederick Chiluba's disputed election victory...
Foreign and local businesses are stepping up pressure on Western donors to resume aid to Frederick Chiluba' s government after the disputed 18 November elections...
Frederick Chiluba's re-election belies the name of his Movement for Multi-Party Democracy...
With UNIP out of the race President Frederick Chiluba is more or less assured of victory...
From 31 October President Frederick Chiluba's government is into extra time...
Vol 37 No 19 |
- HUMAN RIGHTS
Y et President Frederick Chiluba' s government has grown increasingly authoritarian the more it is challenged by journalists and others on its corruption and mismanagement...
Zambians are the clear losers in the three-cornered fight between President Frederick Chiluba his predecessor Kenneth Kaunda and Western donors ahead of October's elections...
All the more so because ex-President Kenneth Kaunda disagrees with President Frederick Chiluba's privatisation strategy which he considers too dependent on South Africa's Anglo- American...
Benin and Zambia have followed the same strategy of simultaneous economic and political liberalisation: President Nicéphore Soglo appears to have had more success than President Frederick Chiluba but both of them face the voters' verdict this year...