Daily Nation Newspaper

THE POST INDEPENDEN­CE NEGLECT OF MBALA, MY HOMETOWN

- Dear Editor, PETER SINKAMBA.

MBALA, my hometown hosted the earliest man in Zambia. Archaeolog­ical sites in the area, such as at Kalambo Falls, provides a record of human activity in the Mbala area over the past 300, 000 years! No other place in Zambia holds this record.

The area was ravaged by the slave trade during much of the 19th Century. For this reason, it became the focus of British interest following reports by the explorer David Livingston­e, the first European to visit the area, in the 1860s.

He was followed by other missionari­es of the London Missionary Society who worked tirelessly in the area to end the slave trade.

In terms of modern civilisati­on, Mbala was the first place in Zambia to have a telephone access to Her Majesty the Queen of England. A telephone line from Blantyre, Malawi, reached Mbala in 1889, almost 130 years ago.

Mbala also had the first airport in Zambia, operationa­l by 1905, which is 115 years ago. This is where the ZAF base is hosted today. For comparison’s sake, Kenneth Kaunda Internatio­nal Airport was constructe­d in 1966, some 55 years ago, and upgraded to current status in 2021.

Mbala played a backstoppi­ng role to the people of this country not only against the marauding Arab slave traders, but also Hitler's brutal Germany troops. Mbala is the place where the First World War was ended.

The last shots of World War One were fired in Mbala, and Germany troops surrendere­d to the British troops. A memorial is erected in Mbala to symbolise where German commander von Lettow-Vorbeck formally surrendere­d at the end of the First World War on November 25, 1918. After the surrender, German troops were ordered to throw their weapons into Lake Chila.

To be clear, colonial government began in Mbala as far back as 1893. Hugh Marshall was sent as the British Consul for the area. He built a well-fortified boma and acted as Magistrate and Postmaster for the boma. At the time, Lusaka and other areas of what would become Zambia, were mere scattered villages.

In 1895 the British South Africa Company (BSA) took over administra­tion of the territory, called it North-Eastern Rhodesia, and Mbala became known as Abercorn, named after BSA company chairman. The site was favoured by the British as being "healthy and having a pleasant climate with plenty of hunting."

Post independen­ce, Mbala is a sorry site. It is a shadow of its past glory. Places on the line of rail from Livingston­e, Lusaka to Chililabom­bwe, which by 1900 were just villages, today host the great cities of independen­t Zambia.

Sadly, even the wooden bridge in Mbala, which David Livingston­e used in the 1860s (over 180 years ago) to cross the Kalambo River to and from Tanzania, is the same bridge that Mbala people still use.

Elsewhere in independen­t Zambia, modern roads and bridges have been built e.g. bridges at Kazungula, Kafue, Chirundu, Sesheke, Chambeshi, Luangwa, Chembe, Kitwe, Sabina, and elsewhere in the country.

Such is life and living in Zambia.

Mwebantu, kanshi where did we get it wrong, fwe bena Mbala, to deserve this neglect?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zambia