Zambia’s ‘King Cobra’ Sata wins presidency in election upset

LUSAKA, (Reuters) – Zambian opposition leader  Michael Sata, a critic of Chinese investment, secured an upset  presidential election victory today which may dent foreign  companies’ view of Africa’s biggest copper producer as a sound  investment destination.   
In a continent where leaders are often reluctant to give up  power, incumbent Rupiah Banda tearfully conceded defeat, saying  the people had spoken. His Movement for Multi-party Democracy  (MMD) party has run Zambia since one-party rule ended in 1991.   
“Now is not the time for violence and retribution. Now is  the time to unite and build tomorrow’s Zambia together,” he told a news conference, his wife Thandiwe standing at his side.    
Sata, 74 and nicknamed “King Cobra” because of his sharp  tongue, toned down his rhetoric against foreign mining firms,  especially from China, in the closing stages of the six-week  campaign but his victory could still make investors nervous.   
Zambia’s kwacha fell 2.8 percent to a 14-month-low of  5,145 against the dollar after Sata’s victory and traders said  it would remain vulnerable until he gave clearer indications on  his future policies.    
Analysts said Sata, the leader of the Patriotic Front (PF),  would almost certainly review contracts with foreign companies struck by Banda’s administration, and could overhaul the  country’s mining, trade and banking regulations.   
“Sata’s upset victory will likely usher in a new era for a  resource-nationalist mining sector policy,” said Sebastian  Spio-Garbrah, an analyst at Africa consultancy DaMina Advisors.   
“Sata has said that his government will insist that foreign  miners keep all their export forex revenues within the country and only repatriate profits. He has called for a new revamp of  the country’s mining code and a review of mining contracts  signed under Banda.”   
Sata told Reuters last week he would maintain strong  commercial and diplomatic ties with China and would not  introduce a minerals windfall tax, but implied he might impose  some form of capital controls to keep dollars in the country.       
Chief Justice Ernest Sakala declared him the winner after he  received 1,150,045 votes compared with Banda’s 961,796 with 95.3  percent of constituencies counted. Sata received 43 percent of  the vote, which was also contested by many minor parties.        
Sata has enjoyed a long and varied career that included  stints in motor vehicle assembly plants in Britain and as a  porter with British Rail before becoming a grassroots political  activist under first president Kenneth Kaunda.   
He likes to keep a statue of a rearing snake on his desk as  a reminder to enemies of his sharp tongue.   
Supporters of Sata, who will be sworn in as president later  on Friday, celebrated the win.   
“At long last the will of the people has been respected. The  people wanted change,” said street vendor Peter Musonda.   
    
 SUPPORT FROM YOUTH   
Sata secured support among the youth on the back of campaign  promises to create jobs and his criticism that Banda’s  government failed to let ordinary Zambians share in the proceeds  from the country’s copper mines.   
“We are now a relieved nation. God has finally answered our  prayer,” said Emmanuel Mwanza, a student at the Zambian Open  University.   
China welcomed the outcome of the vote and said it would  continue fostering cooperation.   
“We respect the Zambian people’s choice, and are willing to  continue to promote traditional friendship with Zambia and  expand mutually beneficial cooperation in every aspect,” Foreign  Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told a regular briefing in Beijing.   
Chinese companies have become major players in Zambia’s $13  billion economy, with total investments by the end of 2010  topping $2 billion, according to data from the Chinese embassy.    
But Sata has accused Chinese mining firms of creating slave  labour conditions with scant regard for safety or the local  culture.   
Election monitors from the European Union and regional  grouping the Southern African Development Community said the  polls were largely fair although there was some violence.   
Youths fought running battles with riot police on Thursday  in the towns of Ndola and Kitwe, 250 km (150 miles) north of  Lusaka, setting fire to vehicles and markets in the normally  peaceful mining heartland.   
Sata had strong backing in urban areas and the economic  centre in the Copper Belt, while Banda, a farmer and former  diplomat, relied on votes from rural areas.   
In 2008 Sata lost to Banda by just 35,000 votes, or 2  percent of the electorate, in a presidential run-off triggered  by the death in office of Levy Mwanawasa.