LUSAKA: Zambian business tycoon Hakainde Hichilema, the veteran opposition politician who made six bids for the country’s presidency before finally landing the top job in a landslide, has described himself as just an ordinary “cattle boy”.
He unsuccessfully contested the 2016 election which he lost by just 100,000 votes, but on Monday his margin over incumbent Edgar Lungu was nearly a million.
This time around, the 59-year-old opposition leader tapped into widespread dissatisfaction with Lungu’s running of the economy and what he called a “brutal regime.”
Hichilema is no stranger to controversy in the copper-rich nation, having run afoul of the authorities numerous times. 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.
As president, Hichilema will inherit a troubled economy after years of Lungu’s infrastructure spending spree in a country where more than half the population has lived below the poverty line even before the Covid 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 his debut speech to the nation.
“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”.