Former Zambian Vice President Guy Scott, who briefly served as the country’s acting president in 2014 and became one of Africa’s few white heads of state in the post-independence era, has died at the age of 82.
According to the Zambian government, Scott passed away on Wednesday at his farm in Lusaka.
Scott served as Zambia’s Vice President from 2011 under President Michael Sata. Following Sata’s death in October 2014, he assumed the role of acting president for three months until a new head of state was elected.
His appointment made him the first white African head of state since F.W. de Klerk left office in South Africa following the country’s first democratic elections in 1994.
Born in Zambia to parents of Scottish and English descent, Scott studied economics before entering politics. He began his political career in 1991 and later served as Minister of Agriculture, where he played a key role in shaping the country’s agricultural policies.
In 2011, he was appointed Zambia’s Vice President, becoming the country’s first white vice president since independence in 1964.
Although constitutional provisions prevented him from contesting the presidency because of his parents’ place of birth, Scott remained an influential figure in Zambian politics and governance.
Leaders and citizens have described him as a dedicated public servant whose career spanned decades of public service and democratic transition.
Scott’s brief tenure as acting president marked a historic chapter in Zambia’s political history and highlighted the country’s constitutional process during a period of national transition.
He is remembered for his contributions to public service, agriculture, and governance, as well as for the unique place he occupies in Zambia’s post-independence political history.