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7 - Shifting Legitimacy: The Trials of Frederick Chiluba

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 August 2009

Caitlin Reiger
Affiliation:
International Center for Transitional Justice, New York
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Summary

The Principal Resident Magistrate Court in Zambia's capital, Lusaka, is an unimpressive building. A tinned roof caps a dusty set of rooms, fake-mahogany panels peel off the walls, and discarded brooms lay hunched in an unruly pile. Smoke from mounds of burning grass outside infiltrates the courtroom, filling it with a woody haze. And everything, from the gate to the witness box to the judge's chair, creaks. Yet this humble setting forms the backdrop to a continent-wide precedent in judicial accountability. On a morning in early May 2005, Zambia's former president, Frederick Chiluba, arrived at court in an ad hoc motorcade of white Toyota pickup trucks. As usual, he was adorned in a dazzlingly sharp suit, as if audaciously exhibiting the evidence of his infamous shopping trips to Geneva. Chiluba took his seat wedged next to a window latticed with iron bars – the first African former head of state ever to be tried for serious crimes in a free and fair domestic court process.

This chapter concerns the numerous trials of Frederick Chiluba on charges of large-scale corruption under ordinary criminal law and gives an analytical focus to the changing levels of international involvement in the process. In doing so, the chapter distinguishes between two phases in Chiluba's trials. The first (Phase I) involves the events leading up to the removal of Chiluba's presidential immunity and his eventual arrest, which were the outcome of a Zambian political movement free from outside assistance.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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