Guy Scott guided the African country through a difficult transition with a “steady hand” and a commitment to constitutional order, President Hakainde Hichilema said
Former acting Zambian President Guy Scott, the first white head of state in sub-Saharan Africa since the end of apartheid, has died aged 82, the government announced.
Scott died on Wednesday after an illness at his farm in Lusaka, the southern African nation’s capital, according to a statement signed by Cabinet Secretary Patrick Kangwa.
Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema has accorded Scott a state funeral “in recognition of distinguished professional and political contribution to the nation,” Kangwa said, adding that burial arrangements will be announced later.
In a separate statement, Hichilema described Scott as a “true Zambian patriot” who devoted many years to public service. He said the former leader guided Zambia through a difficult transition “with a steady hand and a commitment to constitutional order” after the death of President Michael Sata.
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Scott served as vice president under Sata from 2011 until the leader died in office in October 2014. He assumed the presidency under Zambia’s constitutional succession rules and served as acting head of state for around three months, until Edgar Lungu was inaugurated following a special election in January 2015. Lungu died in South Africa in June 2025, but remains unburied amid a dispute between his family and the Zambian government over his funeral arrangements.
Scott’s appointment made him the first white head of state in Africa since South Africa’s F.W. de Klerk, the last leader under apartheid, left office after the country’s first multiracial elections brought Nelson Mandela to power in 1994.
Read more Court blocks burial of former Zambian president over state-family feudBorn in Zambia to Scottish and English parents, he was also the country’s first white leader since independence from Britain in 1964. He could not contest the 2015 election because Zambia’s constitution at the time barred candidates whose parents were not Zambian by birth or descent from running for the presidency.
His brief presidency was marked by a power struggle within the ruling Patriotic Front. Scott dismissed Lungu as the party’s secretary-general in November 2014 but reversed the decision a day later after the move triggered protests and clashes in Lusaka.
A Cambridge-educated economist, Scott entered parliament in 1991 and later served as agriculture minister, earning praise for helping manage a severe regional drought and food shortage. He subsequently broke with the Patriotic Front and supported the United Party for National Development, led by current President Hakainde Hichilema.
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