
SECOND Republican president Frederick Chiluba has advised Zambians against resorting to violence whenever they are aggrieved.
Speaking to Journalists at the Lusaka International Airport before leaving for South Africa for his scheduled medical review yesterday, Dr Chiluba said violence did not pay and that politics was about accommodating divergent views.
He said Zambia, which had been praised by a lot of people, was among the first countries to start the democratisation process and that in a democratic country, peace must prevail.
Dr Chiluba said democracy was about the freedom of speech and the freedom to belong to any political party and that insults or being physical was not part of democracy.
“Violence does not pay and democracy does not require being physical, politics of democracy is politics

of disagreements and you cannot be unified in everything,” he said.
Dr Chiluba advised Zambians to understand the global economic recession.
He said the situation did not start with Zambia alone but had affected big economies such as the United States America and Germany.
“If America and Germany have been hit so hard, banks have been subsidised and there are job losses, certainly Zambia whose economy is tiny, shall be affected and people should understand,” said Dr Chiluba
On reported claims by Patriotic Front president Michael Sata that he was to blame for his defeat in the October 30 presidential election, Dr Chiluba said Mr Sata was his brother and had no quarrels with him.
Dr Chiluba praised late president Levy Mwanawasa and President Rupiah Banda for reaffirming the declaration of Zambia as a Christian nation.
He said when he declared the country a Christian nation, a lot of people thought it was a political gimmick, but that the declaration was fundamental and that the country was on solid ground.

Dr Chiluba said one did not become a born again Christian by works alone but by declarations.
He explained that when he was first evacuated to South Africa two years ago, the cardiologist had little or no hope of him surviving but that the Lord had been kind to him and was recovering well.
Dr Chiluba said he had struggled between hospital and attending to court proceedings where he is facing charges of theft and that the Lord had not deserted him.
The former president, who thanked Zambians and doctors that had attended to him, urged people to repent and turn away from their sins.
He said love and mercy should always endure among Zambians.
Dr Chiluba is accompanied to South Africa by his wife Regina, his spokesperson Emmanuel Mwamba, Physician Justin Kangwa and security officers.
[Times of Zambia]