Sikota wina biography
- Sikota Wina (31 August 1931 – 15 June 2022) was a Zambian politician.
- Sikota Wina was a Zambian politician.
- Sikota Wina (31 August 1931 – 15 June 2022) was a Zambian politician.
- •
Sikota Wina
Sikota Wina (31 ga Agusta 1931 - 15 Yuni 2022) ɗan siyasan Zambia ne. Ya kasance memba a majalisar dokoki da majalisar dokokin ƙasar kuma ministan lafiya na farko na ƙasar. Ya kuma riƙe muƙamin ministan kananan hukumomi da na yaɗa labarai da yawon buɗe ido.
Tarihin rayuwa
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]An haifi Wina a Mongu a shekara ta 1931. Mahaifinsa shi ne Babban Minista ga Babban Hakimin Barotseland.[1] Ya halarci Makarantar Kafue, sannan ya halarci Makarantar Sakandare ta Munali da ke Lusaka,[1][2] kafin ya ci gaba da karatu a Jami'ar Fort Hare a Afirka ta Kudu. Sai dai kuma an kore shi daga jami'ar saboda harkokin siyasa.[1]
Aiki da Siyasa
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]Wina ya koma Arewacin Rhodesia kuma ya yi aiki a Sashen Watsa Labarai na gwamnatin mulkin mallaka, kuma a cikin 1954 an kama shi da shiga gidan cin abinci na turawa kawai-(farar fata kaɗai).[2] A 1956 ya fara aiki a matsayin ɗan jarida, shi idita ne na mujallar African Life.[1] An sake kama shi a watan Maris 1959 a matsayin w
- •
By AUSTIN KALUBA-
The late Sikota Wina’s career, first in the UNIP government where he was in the first cabinet as minister of health and later by holding several positions in the post-UNIP era, encapsulated much of this country’s history, from the racial nuances of the struggle against white minority rule to reversion to plural politics.
In fact, long before the reformists met at the Garden Motel in Lusaka, Wina had courageously condemned the one party system from his Makeni residence in Lusaka, a denunciation that emboldened other critics to come out in the open and denounce the Kenneth Kaunda regime.
His contribution to the independence fight included editing the African Life magazine. The publication printed in Ndola exposed the injustices of the white settler minority rule.
During the run-up to independence, Wina, together with other nationalists was a victim of the amended Emergence Power Ordinance that authorised the governor to detain people without trial to forestall action that might lead to an emergency.
In 1959, under this draconian law, more than fifty nationalist
- •
Sikota Wina
Zambian politician (1931–2022)
Sikota Wina (31 August 1931 – 15 June 2022) was a Zambian politician. He was a member of the Legislative Council and the National Assembly and the country's first Minister of Health. He also held the posts of Minister for Local Government and Minister of Information, Broadcasting and Tourism.
Biography
Wina was born in Mongu in 1931. His father was Chief Minister to the Paramount Chief of Barotseland.[1] He attended Kafue Training School and then Munali Secondary School in Lusaka,[1][2] before going on to study at the University of Fort Hare in South Africa. However, he was expelled from the university due to his political activity.[1]
Wina returned to Northern Rhodesia and worked in the Information Department of the colonial government, and in 1954 he was arrested for entering a whites-only restaurant.[2] In 1956 he began working as a journalist, editing the African Life magazine.[1] He was arrested again in March 1959 as part of a drive against "suspected su
Copyright ©froughy.pages.dev 2025