Queen Mantfombi on the throne of Zulu kingdom until new king is revealed

The Late King Goodwill Zwelithini. Picture: ANA Photographers/African News Agency(ANA)

The Late King Goodwill Zwelithini. Picture: ANA Photographers/African News Agency(ANA)

Published Mar 24, 2021

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Durban - The Zulu nation will have to wait for three more months before they get to know who will be their next King after the passing away of King Goodwill Zwelithini almost two weeks ago but in the meantime Queen Mantfombi Dlamini Zulu will act on the throne.

This was announced by Inkosi Mangosuthu Buthelezi on Wednesday afternoon following a meeting of Zulu royals at Kwakhethomthandayo royal palace in Nongoma in northern KZN.

Buthelezi is the late king’s and Zulu nation’s traditional prime minister.

After the meeting which lasted for about five hours and which was attended by more than 200 members of the royal family, Buthelezi officially confirmed for the first time that Queen Mantfombi Dlamini Zulu, the daughter of the late King Sobhuza of Eswatini and sister to reigning Swati King, Mswati III will act on the throne.

“Today, in the presence of more than 200 members of the Royal Family, His Majesty King Goodwill Zwelithini ka Bhekuzulu’s will was read by his lawyers. In line with the wishes of His Majesty the King, the Family would like to announce that Her Majesty Queen Mantfombi Dlamini Zulu will act as Regent of the Zulu Nation during the interregnum.

“While Her Majesty is the de facto Regent, further decisions on the succession of the Zulu monarchy will not be announced until the Family’s mourning period has been observed. The loss of His Majesty the King has been a tremendous blow and the Family must be allowed to grieve,” Buthelezi announced in a press statement issued on behalf of the royal house.

While the mourning period of three months by the royal family was not announced in the statement, Buthelezi only divulged that to news broadcaster, eNCA, which was camped outside the palace where the meeting was held.

Furthermore, Buthelezi said from Friday the Zulu nation would be allowed to return to the fields and till the soil. This is as they were mourning and as a sign of respect, they were not allowed to till the soil.

“However, the Regent and the Royal Family have asked that I impress upon the Nation the late King’s wish for his people to take out their hoes on Friday. As a champion of food security and subsistence farming, His Majesty urged that things not come to a standstill for a long mourning period. People are thus free to plough and plant and work from Friday 26 March 2021, in accordance with His Majesty’s wishes,” Buthelezi added.

While the Zulu succession pattern has always not been settled through having a prince who comes from another established royal family, it has been widely speculated that one of the sons of the acting regent (who comes from the monarch of Eswatini) would take over the throne.

Political Bureau