Zambia declares 7 days of mourning for ex-President Lungu

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(FILES) Edgar Chagwa Lungu, President, Republic of Zambia, speaks to the 74th Session of the General Assembly at the United Nations headquarters in New York on September 25, 2019 in New York. Former Zambian President Edgar Lungu, who lost power in 2021, died Thursday in a hospital in South Africa at the age of 68, his party and family announced. Lungu had been receiving specialised treatment in a clinic in Pretoria, the Patriotic Front said in a statement. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP)

Zambia on Saturday has declared seven days of national mourning in honour of the country’s former President, Edgar Lungu, who died in South Africa on Thursday, the government said.

Lungu, who died at the age of 68, ruled the large but sparsely populated southern African nation from January 2015 until August 2021, when he lost to current President Hakainde Hichilema.

‘The government of the Republic of Zambia wishes to inform the nation that President Hakainde Hichilema has accorded a state funeral to the sixth president, Edgar Lungu, who died on 5 June’, said the secretary to the cabinet, Patrick Kangwa.

The government announced that all flags would fly at half-mast from 8 to 14 June and that entertainment events would be suspended during that time.

Kangwa said that the body of Lungu would arrive in Zambia next Wednesday and that Belvedere Lodge in the capital, Lusaka, had been designated as the official place of mourning.

Lungu was receiving specialised medical treatment in a clinic in Pretoria, South Africa, his political party, the Patriotic Front (PF), said.

He was suffering from recurring achalasia, a condition caused by narrowing of the oesophagus.

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