Updated | A mystery no-show at
the United Nations raises speculations about the state of health of
Zambia’s President, Michael Sata, who last week emphatically told the
Lusaka parliament, “I am not dead.”
The Associated Press reported Friday that the 77-year old president was treated at his hotel by doctors.
A spokesperson for the New York Police Department confirmed Friday
morning that Sata was treated at his hotel by U.S. State Department
doctors and remained there, contradicting earlier reports of his death,
including a report by Newsweek, credited to a source who has
since said his statement was not definitive. A spokesman at the Zambian
mission declined comment when several reporters inquired about Sata’s
health.
On Friday, Zambian vice president Guy Scott told Parliament
that the president's health was normal and denied reports that he was
unwell, according to local media.
The speculations started swirling Wednesday night, when
Sata failed to show up for his scheduled address at the General
Assembly, which this week conducts its annual debate, an opportunity for
the U.N.’s 193 members to showcase their policies to the world. Sata
was slated to follow Venezuela’s president, Nicolas Maduro, Wednesday
night.
The U.N. moderator then received a notice, and after a
short hesitation announced, instead, that the next speaker, Britain’s
Prime Minister David Cameron, would address the council. No alternative
time for Sata’s address was announced.
In yet another twist in the mystery, a provisional list of
speakers that was issued by the UN Friday slated Zambia's foreign
minister, Harry Kalaba, to address the general assembly as the last
speaker Friday night. He would speak instead of the president, who was
originally scheduled to speak on Wednesday.
According to All Africa,
a website specializing in reporting from the continent, Sata traveled
to New York accompanied by six doctors as part of his entourage of 38
people. The report cited an unnamed source who said that the reason the
president came to New York ahead of the launch of the Wednesday debate
was to visit the Sloane Kettering Cancer Center.
Wires agencies reported last Friday
that Sata addressed parliament after failing for a long time to appear
in public, raising speculation about the state of his health. His wife,
Christine kept him going, Sata told Parliament, adding, “I am not dead.”
But rather than finishing his address, he said after a
while, “I thank you for listening and I am leaving the whole speech to
the Speaker.”
Corrections Appended: An earlier version of this story quoting
"a well-placed source at the U.N." who said that the Zambian president,
Michael Sata, had died in his New York hotel room was in error. The
source has since said his statement was not definitive. According to the
New York Police Department on Friday morning, Mr Sata is being treated
by doctors at his New York hotel . Newsweek regrets the error.
An earlier version of this article also
incorrectly described a wire story on a South African website as
appearing on a Zambian website and referenced an Associated Press report
that Zambian President Michael Sata was treated at his hotel by State
Department doctors before being taken to the hospital. The current
version reflects an update by the Associated Press that he was treated
in his hotel and remained there.
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