Diabetes Kills ‘Xenophobic’ Zulu King

The Zulu King of South Africa, Goodwill Zwelithini, has been reported dead, aged 72.

King Zwelithini, according to a statement from the Zulu Monarchy, died on Friday morning, March 12, 2021, after a long battle with diabetes.

He had been hospitalized in February 2021 due to diabetes.

King Zwelithini was in 2015, accused of sparking the xenophobic attacks in South Africa with comments in which he encouraged South Africans to “pop our head lice.”

“We must remove ticks and place them outside in the sun. We ask foreign nationals to pack their belongings and be sent back,” he reportedly told supporters at a stadium in Durban in 2015.

A group of Nigerians later called on the International Criminal Court (ICC) to probe the Zulu King for crime against humanity.

King Zwelithini is the longest serving monarch of the Zulu Kingdom.

Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, the traditional Prime Minister to the Zulu Monarch and nation, announced the King’s demise in a statement. He indicated that  the king’s health had taken a turn for the worse.

“It is with utmost grief that I inform the nation of the passing of his Majesty King Goodwill Zwelithini ka Bhekuzulu, King of the Zulu nation,” Buthelezi said in the statement.

“Tragically, while still in hospital, his Majesty’s health took a turn for the worse and he subsequently passed away in the early hours of this morning,” the statement added.

King Zwelithini was the eighth monarch of the Zulu Kingdom.

A statement issued by Buthelezi on February 7, 2021, on the King’s health observed that he was hospitalized after “several unstable glucose readings”

The late King was born on  July 14, 1948 at Nongoma in KwaZulu-Natal.

He was the eldest son of King Cyprian Bhekuzulu and his second wife, Queen Thomo and was educated at the Bhekuzulu College of Chiefs. He was later  privately tutored.

His father, King Cyprian, passed away in 1968.

 

By Melvin Tarlue