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Former Zambian president Edgar Lungu at the UN General Assembly in New York on September 25 2019. Picture:REUTERS/ CARLO ALLEGRI
Former Zambian president Edgar Lungu at the UN General Assembly in New York on September 25 2019. Picture:REUTERS/ CARLO ALLEGRI


Zambia’s Constitutional Court ruled on Tuesday Edgar Lungu is ineligible to run for another term in office after the former president he announced his return to politics last year.

The country’s highest court ruled that Lungu’s first term, which he served from 2015 to 2016 after the death of then-president Michael Sata, counted as a full term.

His second term was from September 2016 to August 2021, and he then lost the presidency to United Party for National Development candidate Hakainde Hichilema in the 2021 national election.

"I accept this verdict. I accept it not with resignation but with resolve," Lungu said in a post on social media platform Facebook after the decision.

Civil rights groups say Lungu, of the Patriotic Front (PF) party, would have been a strong challenger to Hichilema in the next presidential election, due in 2026.

Lungu said he would now implement "plan B" but didn’t provide details.

"The constitution makes the first respondent ineligible to participate in any future elections as a presidential candidate," the judgment reads, noting that Lungu had twice been elected and has twice held office.

During the memorial service for Sata in October 2023, Lungu said he would come out of retirement. His political comeback followed the arrest of several family members, including his wife, on allegations of possessing the proceeds of crime.

There was heavy police presence outside the court session, which Lungu did not attend.

"We are studying the matter. But we are gravely concerned by the court’s decision and ruling," PF spokesperson Emmanuel Mwamba said.


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