Guy Scott, the first white person to rule Zambia since
independence from Britain in 1964, said though his skin was white, his blood
was black.
He told journalists on Friday in Lusaka that `I may be white
from the outside, but my blood is black.’’
He said he would not give interviews for the time being
because the media kept referring to him as a white president.
Scott, the 70-year-old economist and former agriculture
minister who served as President Michael Sata’s Deputy, became the head of
state on Wednesday after Sata died in London on Tuesday.
However, he cannot seek the presidency in the elections due
in 90 days’ time because of his Scottish parentage.
The constitution stipulates that the president of Zambia
must be a Zambian with both parents born in the country.
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