Saturday, June 21, 2025

Mweetwa Defends Government, Blames Family Impasse on Misinformation and Legal Woes

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Mweetwa Defends Government, Blames Family Impasse on Misinformation and Legal Woes
By Staff Reporter

Zambia’s Minister of Information and Media, Cornelius Mweetwa, speaking  to Lulu Gaboo from Channel Africa on the protracted standoff between the government and the family of late President Edgar Chagwa Lungu, describing the situation as “unprecedented, un-Zambian, and culturally troubling.”

Speaking in an interview  addressing the delayed repatriation of the former president’s body from South Africa, Mweetwa said the government had done everything within its power to support the Lungu family from the time the former leader fell ill. He expressed deep regret that the funeral of a former Head of State has been overshadowed by what he termed “a shocking and illogical impasse.”

“This is something beyond reason,” Mweetwa said. “It is culturally and traditionally un-Zambian. The nation is shocked. The continent is watching, and what has transpired goes against the very way we, as Africans, mourn our dead.”

He revealed that the Zambian government was caught completely off guard when the family halted the repatriation of Lungu’s remains at Lanseria Airport in Johannesburg, just before the body was due to be flown back to Lusaka. “There was no outstanding issue of such gravity that should have led to this unfortunate situation,” he said.

Mweetwa clarified that the government had maintained contact with Lungu’s family during his medical treatment in South Africa and had coordinated with authorities there to ensure all arrangements were in place. He thanked the South African government for the support rendered both during Lungu’s treatment and after his passing.

Dismissing claims that Lungu was mistreated or abandoned by the state, Mweetwa firmly stated that the former president received all benefits due to him under Zambian law until he resumed active politics.

“There is an allegation that he died a persecuted man and without benefits. That is false,” Mweetwa said. “According to Chapter 15, Section 5 of the Former Presidents’ Benefits Act, any former president who returns to active politics loses their entitlement to those benefits. That is what the law says. And it has applied to others before him, including Rupiah Banda.”

He further noted that it was ironic that the same Patriotic Front leaders, who once enforced that law against Banda, were now framing its application as persecution in Lungu’s case.

Responding to widely publicized statements by Lungu’s legal representatives  including the controversial claim that the late president had instructed that President Hakainde Hichilema should not come near his body  Mweetwa said the entire country was blindsided by such assertions.

“There was no logical cause to make such a divisive claim,” he said, adding that the government had never sought to politicize the funeral. Instead, it had focused on ensuring a dignified farewell befitting a former head of state.

Turning to Lungu’s immunity, the minister noted that unlike previous presidents, Lungu passed on without ever having his immunity lifted or facing criminal charges. “Dr. Kaunda was placed under house arrest. Chiluba was prosecuted. Banda’s immunity was lifted. Lungu has faced none of that. So, to portray him as persecuted is disingenuous.”

In a pointed comment, Mweetwa suggested that the resistance to government involvement in the burial process might be influenced by legal anxieties within Lungu’s close circle. He hinted that some of the former president’s immediate family members  including his wife and children  are facing legal scrutiny over what he described as “astronomical and unexplained wealth.”

“That, perhaps, is the real source of the tension,” he said. “But it must not prevent us from giving a dignified burial to a former president.”

Despite the controversy, Mweetwa reiterated that President Hichilema’s government remains committed to dialogue and reconciliation. He emphasized that efforts were ongoing to resolve the standoff with the family and to proceed with the repatriation and burial with the dignity and national unity such an occasion demands.

“This is not a time for divisions,” he said. “President Hichilema continues to engage in good faith. Our goal is simple: to return the body of the late president to his homeland and to honour him in the spirit of One Zambia, One Nation.”

However, shortly after this interview, President Hichilema officially marked the end of the national mourning period  a significant signal that the state funeral process, in its national form, had effectively concluded. This move, while made with decorum, now places the responsibility for the remaining funeral proceedings squarely in the hands of the Lungu family, making any further delays or decisions a matter of private coordination.

As of this report, the funeral arrangements remain uncertain, but the minister pledged to return with updates “within the day” once progress is made. The world continues to watch as Zambia navigates a delicate national moment marred by political undercurrents, personal grief, and legal shadows.

Source: Channel Africa

19 COMMENTS

  1. Please the funeral is over….according to HH but why are they talking about it again….can’t they just carry on with their Politics……let the family bury Lungu in peace please….

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  2. This rare and unusual incident has attracted attention from within and without.
    Let’s not weaponize President Lungu’s funeral albeit for his status as an immediate former head of state.
    He deserves an honorable sendoff all other factors notwithstanding.
    My condolences from Kenya.

  3. HH already announced that the funeral is over…and Mweetwa still want to continue with the funeral…confused government…looks like UPND is a Chipante pante Government

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  4. You cannot pull the wool over our eyes any longer
    Whather you like it or not your/our image around the world has been dented
    You lot dragged us into this mess when in reality it is between ECL and HH
    As long as the puppet master keeps pulling the strings this wont end now as it should

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  5. On any day, and for all funerals as per logic, custom and tradition, family is the final authority. And especially that there is no constitutional guidance. Yes the state has ‘some’ say but not to the extent of even stopping mourners from going to the airport. This impasse would have been avoided had the state been more compassionate and understanding.

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    • Get the facts right. What happened in the case of Kenneth Kaunda?
      Going to the Airport? Follow issues. There is a recorded incidence where this was allowed and the ensuing confusion that took place.
      A commissioner of Police was reportedly dismissed for the security lapse.
      So before you make statements be certain you know the facts, circumstances and context of the decisions made.
      In Zambia we have the habit allowing gossip and innuendo to frame our thoughts. Nkani ya mu moba….iyo

  6. Lets not waste time on LUNGU,is a Malawian.At least that is what Mulokoti and Siwale told us and that why there is no Uncle,Aunty,young brother,sister or Village to point at.

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    • Just like some say KK was Malawian. Sata from Tanzania. Chiluba from Zaire. Rupia from Zim. And HH from Mozambique… your point being????

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    • @Haakainde the comments show your distain for the man. Bweengwa is Mozambique? Please dream something else up. Olo ni ku funa ku nama boza na dyonko. Boza yayi…Rupia’s parents just went to work there. His family can be traced. Remember the Federation era? Or you like Sishuwa just make up things for political milage and his wants to claim he is a historian don….please…

  7. A blooming shame
    A price for this is going to be high
    there is no doubt about that
    HH should have got off his high horse flown to SA and personally tried to make some peace with the family, Instead of delegating others to clean the mess

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    • Lola Mmitti, the Don’s adviser got it all wrong. Now the government is regretting, going by this information from the spokesperson. What did she and him want to do with the body, kanshi? Since the national mornings was cancelled, I urge them to also cut off public discussions of the funeral all together.

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  8. I told you……..

    You must listen to Spaka…….

    There is no other reason for the impass but the investigations into unexplained wealth, and……..

    An opportunistic PF hoping to get campaign mileage

    Period

    FWD2041

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