Sunday World (South Africa)

Battle for the Amazulu kingship to be fought fiercely in the courts

Skirmishes and backstabbi­ng continue in royal house

- By Sandile Motha

The Amazulu royal house’s false unity is beginning to crack, barely a week after rival factions publicly claimed that they had buried the hatchet and were now uniting behind the heir-apparent to the throne Prince

Misuzulu kazwelithi­ni.

Sunday World has establishe­d through senior royal insiders that the battle for the throne will be won in the courts. They said there were ongoing behindthe-scenes skirmishes and backstabbi­ng among royal siblings.

“What you saw last week was a mere public stunt and a fictitious unity. This is far from over. The current debate in the royal house is around the authentici­ty of the signature in the will of the late king.

“So, the senior princesses and princes want this question to be resolved first before a king is installed. Many are secretly supporting Queen Sibongile in her court case challengin­g the late king’s estate,” said the insider who preferred to remain anonymous.

Queen Sibongile Dlamini Zulu is the first wife of the late King Goodwill Zwelithini, who has made an urgent applicatio­n to the Pietermari­tzburg High Court to clarify her constituti­onal rights as the first wife.

In her court papers, besides demanding that she be given a 50% share of the late king’s estate, she also wants the process of installing the next king to be stopped and that the Kwazulu-natal provincial government must not proceed with acknowledg­ing anyone as the king of Amazulu.

Queen Sibongile of the Kwakhethom­thandayo royal palace also claims that the signature in the will of the late king was also forged and therefore she wants the court to summon experts to examine its authentici­ty.

On Thursday, the king designate met premier Sihle Zikalala.

The meeting was apparently aimed at discussing the date of his installati­on, including getting the budget input of the soon-to-be Ingonyama and how the more than R60million annual budget for Amazulu royal household should be allocated.

Besides these developmen­ts, this week Prince Thokozani Zulu, who has been dubbed a royal dissident for the antics he pulled during the announceme­nt that Prince Misuzulu had been nominated to be the next monarch, said when the time is right, he will spill the beans.

Prince Thokozani received a tongue lashing from traditiona­l prime minister Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi for seeking to challenge the nomination of Prince Misuzulu. His attempts were shot down by an agitated Buthelezi, who accused him of being a troublemak­er.

The scuffle and commotion that happened during the memorial service of the late Queen Regent Mantfombi Dlamini led to Prince Misuzulu being whisked away amid safety concerns. Professorj­abulani Maphalala, an acclaimed historian and Zulu culture expert, said it would take some time before the rival factions see eye to eye, saying the strength and character of any king is tested through the trials and tribulatio­ns that he faces. “There is no king in Zulu history whose journey to the throne was easy. “That is why even the late King Zwelithini in his praises he was called Umdlokomba­ne ovuka adle abakwabo, meaning he had to face and fight his own blood relatives before he was accorded the throne,” said Maphalala.

The character of any king is tested through the trials and tribulatio­ns he faces

 ?? /Gallo Images ?? The authentici­ty of the late King Goodwill Zwelithini’s will is contested.
/Gallo Images The authentici­ty of the late King Goodwill Zwelithini’s will is contested.
 ??  ?? Prince Misuzulu kazwelithi­ni will not have an easy path to the Amazulu throne.
Prince Misuzulu kazwelithi­ni will not have an easy path to the Amazulu throne.
 ??  ?? Queen Sibongile Dlamini Zulu has approached the courts.
Queen Sibongile Dlamini Zulu has approached the courts.
 ??  ?? Prince Thokozani Zulu has been dubbed a royal dissident.
Prince Thokozani Zulu has been dubbed a royal dissident.

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