| Zambia |
| Southward-migrating
Bantu invaded the area that is now Zambia over a period of several centuries.
The forerunners of the Sotho and Nguni groups were in Zambia before AD 1000.
These early agricultural settlers and migrants developed mining and metalworking
techniques. A new group, the Shona Bantu, arrived in the 12th century. Later,
the Karanga clan of the Shona established the great empire of the Mwene
Mutapa, which included southern Zambia. In the 17th and 18th centuries,
the Lunda and Lozi from the Congo (now the DRC) populated the northern plains
and upper Zambezi River area. In the 19th century, the Kololo, fleeing the
wars in South Africa, moved northward and established brief control over
much of central and northern Zambia before the Lozi once again asserted
their dominance. Eastern Zambia was settled by Bantu peoples related to
those in Malawi. Despite their differences, these various Bantu groups shared
certain common characteristics. They were primarily agriculturists, but
most of them also kept cattle. They were tribally oriented, and their states
usually were small, except when a dominant king, such as the ruler of the
Karanga, Kololo, or Lozi, imposed his will on neighboring tribes. Consequently,
when the British moved into Zambia-or Barotseland, as they called it-in
the latter part of the 19th century, no powerful kingdoms were there to
resist them. British Rule At the time of British penetration in the area, the strongest state in Zambia was that of the Lozi under Chief Lewanika, who openly solicited British protection. A treaty establishing British protection was signed between the Lozi overlord and a representative of the British South Africa Company in 1889. Eastern Zambia was added to Britain's empire by Sir Harry Johnston during his conquest of Nyasaland (now Malawi). A regular British resident, titled agent in charge, was sent to Lewanika in 1897. Three years later the British government directly assumed jurisdiction over the entire area. British government in Zambia (then called Northern Rhodesia) was the same as in its other African territories, consisting of a small central executive authority made up of appointed Europeans headed by a governor; the system of indirect rule allowed great freedom to local rulers. In the late 1920s a major development occurred: the discovery of copper in the north. This led to the extension of the railway and the building of the first smelting plants in the so-called copper belt. By the beginning of World War II in 1939, Zambia had become a major producer of copper, and the extreme urbanization of the northwest was under way. The copper industry brought an influx of European technicians and administrators to Zambia, and although they never gained the political power of European settlers in Southern Rhodesia (present-day Zimbabwe), they became a dominant force in Zambian life. In 1953, under pressure from the white minority in Southern Rhodesia, the British government forced the creation of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, comprising the territories of Northern Rhodesia, Southern Rhodesia, and Nyasaland (now Malawi). It was dominated by the white population of the territories, and the central government headed by Lord Malvern and Sir Roy Welensky was a reflection of Southern Rhodesian politics. The federation was condemned from its inception by every African politician in the state. The path toward independence was more difficult for Zambia than for most other British African territories because the federation had to be broken first. This was accomplished by Malawi in conjunction with pressure applied by Zambian nationalists, led by Kenneth Kaunda. Independence The federation was dissolved at the end of 1963. Nyasaland became independent as Malawi in July 1964, and Northern Rhodesia as Zambia in October 1964. Southern Rhodesia changed its name to Rhodesia. Kaunda's party, the United National Independence Party (UNIP), won the first and all subsequent elections until the early 1990s. In 1972 Zambia became a one-party state, but its leadership remained moderate and pro-Western. Private land was nationalized in 1975 as part of an unsuccessful agricultural improvement program. The completion of the rail link to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in 1976, freed Zambia from its dependence on the Rhodesian- and South African-controlled railway for the transport of its copper. President Kaunda opposed the white-dominated regime in Rhodesia, and his assistance to guerrilla insurgents proved crucial to the establishment of a black majority government there in 1980. Although Kaunda was reelected to a sixth presidential term in 1988, popular discontent with Zambia's stagnant economy and his autocratic rule continued to grow. In 1990 food riots and an abortive coup shook the government, and the aging leader agreed to allow multiparty voting. The opposition Movement for Multiparty Democracy won the 1991 general election, and its presidential candidate, Frederick Chiluba, defeated Kaunda by a wide margin. In May 1996 Chiluba's government passed a controversial amendment to the constitution that required presidential candidates to be from families established in Zambia for at least two generations. The amendment also prevented presidents from serving more than two terms. Kaunda, whose parents were immigrants from Malawi, was therefore disqualified on both accounts. In response, the UNIP, under Kaunda's leadership, boycotted the November 1996 elections. Chiluba was elected to a second term. |