By AFP
In Summary
- Edgar Lungu is set to be inaugurated as president of Zambia on Tuesday, after a last-minute court bid by a defeated opposition candidate failed to halt the ceremony.
- Hakainde Hichilema, a wealthy businessman who has run five times for president, accused Lungu, the election commission and court judges of all being guilty of fraud over the vote result.
- But on Monday, the supreme court rejected his final bid to delay the inauguration.
Edgar Lungu is set to be inaugurated as president of Zambia
on Tuesday, after a last-minute court bid by a defeated opposition
candidate failed to halt the ceremony.
Lungu won the August 11 election by around 100,000 votes but his
opponent Hakainde Hichilema has alleged that the result was riddled
with fraud.
The inauguration will be held at a Chinese-built sports stadium
in the capital, with regional dignitaries including President Robert
Mugabe of neighbouring Zimbabwe expected to attend.
Hichilema, a wealthy businessman who has run five times for
president, accused Lungu, the election commission and court judges of
all being guilty of fraud over the vote result.
But on Monday, the supreme court rejected his final bid to delay the inauguration.
Official election results put Lungu narrowly ahead on 50.35 per
cent against 47.63 per cent for Hichilema among a field of nine
candidates — just enough to avoid a second-round run-off.
Lungu, 59, first took office last year after beating Hichilema
in a snap election, and has since faced falling prices for copper — the
country's key export — soaring unemployment and inflation rising to over
20 per cent.
Lungu has said little since the election, except to make a
speech warning that "for the next five years, it will be total work,
there will be no honeymoon" if Zambia is to tackle its economic
problems.
The country is known for its relative stability but the election
campaign was marked by clashes between supporters of Lungu's Patriotic
Front (PF) and Hichilema's United Party for National Development (UPND).
After the tense campaign, Zambia was peaceful on polling day and
has not experienced the feared violence during a delayed vote count and
subsequent court hearings.
Hichilema, 54, on Friday told his supporters to "fight to restore your democratic rights" in the wake of the election.
"From now onwards, we are not just politicians but freedom fighters and we shall ask for our rights to be heard," he said.
Zambia last held a peaceful transfer of power to an opposition party in 2011 when Michael Sata took office.
Sata died in 2014, and the 2015 election gave Lungu the right to finish Sata's term.
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