The Pak Banker

'Cattle boy' millionair­e: Zambia's new president

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Hakainde Hichilema, who takes the oath of office on Tuesday as president of Zambia, is a business tycoon who describes himself as just an ordinary "cattle boy".

The veteran opposition politician made six bids for the presidency before finally landing the top job in a landslide.

On August 12, he garnered almost one million more votes than his predecesso­r and long-time rival, Edgar Lungu, to whom he had narrowly lost twice.

The last was in the 2016 election, in which Lungu scraped a victory with just 100,000 more votes.

This time around, the 59-year-old opposition leader tapped into widespread dissatisfa­ction with Lungu's running of Zambia's economy and what he called a "brutal regime."

Hichilema is no stranger to controvers­y in the copper-rich southern African nation, having run afoul of the authoritie­s on numerous occasions. He regularly mentions that he has been arrested 15 times since getting into politics.

After the 2016 election, he faced treason charges for allegedly failing to pull over to give way to the presidenti­al motorcade.

He spent four months in a maximum-security jail before the charges were dropped, and has promised a "better democracy" under his rule.

"We are not going to arrest those who arrested us, because then we are no different from them," Hichilema, popularly known as "HH", said in his debut speech to the nation.

As president, he has inherited a troubled economy after years of Lungu's spending spree in a country where more than half the population lived below the poverty line even before the Covid-19 pandemic.

Last year, Zambia became the first African nation to default on its debt in the coronaviru­s era.

"We have an enormous task ahead to revive our economy and deliver on your expectatio­ns," Hichilema said in the same speech.

"The journey will be tough and challengin­g, there will be ups and downs, but I am certain that with hard work and commitment, we will succeed in building a better life for you."

Hichilema, one of Zambia's richest people, has worked hard to shed his image as an elitist who lacks the common touch.

"I'm just a cattle boy... it's a childhood love," he told AFP in an interview in May, describing himself as "an ordinary citizen, an ordinary African".

In his debut address, the politician returned to the theme, recalling attending school "with no shoes".

He added: "I got the opportunit­y... we want to expand those opportunit­ies for all our children to better than what HH has become."

Hichilema was born into a poor family in the southern district of Monze, but says his "grit and determinat­ion" at school won him a scholarshi­p to the University of Zambia.

He graduated with a degree in economics and business administra­tion before getting an MBA degree at Britain's University of Birmingham.

At age 26, he was already CEO of the Zambian branch of a large internatio­nal accountanc­y firm, party.

He worked his way up to become one of the country's wealthiest men, with business interests spanning finance, ranching, property, healthcare and tourism.

Critics had viewed him as a political outsider, an economic jargon-spouting corporate leader who was catapulted into politics following the 2006 death of Anderson Mazoka, former leader of the United Party for National Developmen­t, which Hichilema bankrolled at the time.

But recently, the man affectiona­tely referred to as "Bally", slang for dad, "has tried to blend with the ordinary (people) much more, swapping tailored business suits with casual fatigues or jeans," according to Zambian analyst O'Brien Kaaba.

Hichilema vowed to leave office peacefully after serving his term.

"I want to assure the people of Zambia in advance-when our time to leave comes we will graciously leave," he said in his maiden speech.

A Christian from the Tonga ethnic group, Hichilema is married and has three children.

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