Webmaster   Hosting by jobsforcooks   About Us   Contact Us   © All About Africa. All rights reserved
Our Logo 			width="93"

All About Africa
Overland from Cork to Cape Town

Our Logo 			width="93"
PLEASE SUPPORT OUR GENEROUS SPONSORS     -     Ballymaloe Cookery School     -     Cully and Sully Ready Meals     -     SuperValu Midleton     -     Ballymaloe Country Relish     -     Architectural and Metal Systems     -     GE Healthcare     -     Feidhlim Harty Wetland Systems     -     Midleton Credit Union     -     Classic Windows     -     Fionnuala Hennessey     -     Zebedee Marketing     -     The Ballymaloe Shop     -     Coleman's Shoes     -     Katwalk     -     Fat Albert’s     -     Footprintz     -     Harty’s Bar and Restaurant     -     East Cork Oil     -     Well and Good     -     Days of Whitegate     -     Jameson Heritage Centre     -     Trabolgan     -     TC Valeting     -     Lynch Tile Centre     -     Heritage Developments     -     Pat Irwin’s Electrical     -     Eureka Army Surplus     -     Denbar Jewellery     -     Bill Russell's Music Shop     -     Office One     -     Murphy’s Pharmacy, Youghal     -     Co-op SuperStores Midleton     -     Denis O’Leary Pharmacy     -     O’Flynn Constuction     -     Cibo Restaurant, Cork     -     Denis Mac Sweeney     -     Ballymaloe Country Relish...
Home   Journal   Articles   Photogallery   Message Board   Ireland   Africa News   Resources   Education   Sponsors  
Algeria
Tunisia
Libya
Egypt
Sudan
Ethiopia
Kenya
Uganda
Congo, DRC
Rwanda
Tanzania
Mozambique
Malawi
Zambia
Namibia
Botswana
Lesotho
South Africa

Visit our media sponsors:
Read our articles every week in the Imokilly People!

Zambia

Geography

Zambia, a landlocked country in south-central Africa, is about one-tenth larger than Texas. It is surrounded by Angola, Zaire, Tanzania, Malawi, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Botswana, and Namibia. The country is mostly a plateau that rises to 8,000 ft (2,434 m) in the east.

History

Early humans inhabited present-day Zambia between one and two million years ago. Today the country is made up almost entirely of Bantu-speaking peoples. Empire builder Cecil Rhodes obtained mining concessions in 1889 from King Lewanika of the Barotse and sent settlers to the area soon thereafter. The region was ruled by the British South Africa Company, which he established, until 1924, when the British government took over the administration. From 1953 to 1964, Northern Rhodesia was federated with Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) and Nyasaland (now Malawi) in the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. On Oct. 24, 1964, Northern Rhodesia became the independent nation of Zambia.

Kenneth Kaunda, the first president, kept Zambia within the Commonwealth of Nations. The country's economy, dependent on copper exports, was threatened when Rhodesia declared its independence from British rule in 1965 and defied UN sanctions, which Zambia supported, an action that deprived Zambia of its trade route through Rhodesia. The U.S., Britain, and Canada organized an airlift in 1966 to ship gasoline into Zambia.

In 1972 Kaunda outlawed all opposition political parties. The world copper market collapsed in 1975. The Zambian economy was devastated—it had been the third-largest miner of copper in the world after the United States and Soviet Union. With a soaring debt and inflation rate in 1991, riots took place in Lusaka, resulting in a number of killings. Mounting domestic pressure forced Kaunda to move Zambia toward multiparty democracy. National elections on Oct. 31, 1991, brought a stunning defeat to Kaunda. The new president, Frederick Chiluba, called for sweeping economic reforms, including privatization and the establishment of a stock market. He was reelected in Nov. 1996. Chiluba declared martial law in 1997 and arrested Kaunda following a failed coup attempt. The 1999 slump in world copper prices again depressed the economy since copper provides 80% of Zambia's export earnings.

In 2001 Chiluba contemplated changing the constitution to allow him to run for another presidential term. After protests he relented, and selected Levy Mwanawasa, a former vice president with whom he had fallen out, as his successor. Mwanawasa became president in Jan. 2002; opposition parties protested over alleged fraud. In June 2002, Mwanawasa, once seen as a pawn of Chiluba, accused the former president of stealing millions from the government while in office. Chiluba was arrested and charged in Feb. 2003.

Although the country faced the threat of famine in 2002, the president refused to accept any international donations of food that had been genetically modified, which Mwanawasa considered “poison.” In Aug. 2003, impeachment proceedings against the president for corruption were rejected by Parliament.

Source: InfoPlease, Feb 13 2005.

Africa Now
Art
Music
Literature
Environment
Wildlife
Conservation
Urban Africa
Debt
Poverty
Conflict
Health
Development
Aid Agencies
Corruption
Religion
Gender

Visit our main sponsors:
Visit our main sponsors: