LC control no. | n 92024071 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Chiluba, Frederick, 1943-2011 |
Variant(s) | Chiluba, Frederick J. T., 1943-2011 Chiluba, Frederick Jacob Titus, 1943-2011 |
See also | Zambia. President (1991-2002 : Chiluba) |
Associated country | Zambia |
Birth date | 1943-04 |
Death date | 2011-06-18 |
Place of birth | Kitwe (Zambia) |
Place of death | Lusaka (Zambia) |
Affiliation | National Union of Building, Engineering, and General Workers (Zambia) Zambia Congress of Trade Unions United National Independence Party (Zambia) Movement for Multi-Party Democracy (Zambia) |
Profession or occupation | Labor union members Politicians Presidents |
Found in | Kamwambe, G.T.N. Frederick Chiluba ... 1991: p. 41 (b. 4-30-43 in Wusakile, Kitwe, Zambia) Democracy, 1995: t.p. (Frederick J.T. Chiluba) p. 2 (on 2 November 1991, he became president of the Republic of Zambia) Wikipedia WWW site, Dec. 14, 2005 (Frederick Jacob Titus Chiluba; president of Zambia, Nov. 2, 1991-Jan. 2, 2002) New York times WWW site, June 20, 2011 (in obituary published June 19: Frederick Chiluba; Frederick Jacob Titus Chiluba; d. Saturday [June 18, 2011], Lusaka, aged 68; first democratically elected president of Zambia, a man whose image as a defender of civil liberties was later tarnished by his efforts to suppress political opposition and accusations that he used millions of dollars of public money on his wardrobe and other extravagances) Dictionary of African Biography, accessed January 17, 2015, via Oxford African American Studies Center database: (Chiluba, Frederick; Frederick Jacob Titus Chiluba; trade unionist, politician, president of Zambia; born April 1943 in Kitwe, Zambia. He worked for Atlas Copco, Copperbelt (1966); was elected president of the National Union of Building, Engineering, and General Workers (NUBEGW) (1971); became a leader of Zambia Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) (1974). He was expelled from United National Independence Party (UNIP). He became a head of Movement for Multi-Party Democracy (1990) andwas elected president of Zambia (1991). He won a second term (1996), leaving office in 2002. He died 18 June 2011 in Lusaka, Zambia) |