Charlotte Scott
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Charlotte Harland also known by her married name as Charlotte Scott is a Zambian politician and business woman of British desent and wife to Guy Scott was acting President of Zambia from October 2014 to January 2015 and also served as Vice-President of Zambia from 2011 to 2014. [2][3]
Charlotte Harland - Scott | |
---|---|
First Lady of Zambia (Acting first lady) | |
In office 29 October 2014 – 25 January 2015 | |
President | Guy Scott (Acting President) [1] |
Preceded by | Chrstine Kaseba |
Succeeded by | Esther Lungu |
Second Lady of Zambia | |
In office 23 September 2011 – 29 October 2014 | |
President | Michael Sata |
Preceded by | Ireen Kunda |
Personal details | |
Born | Charlotte June 3, 1977 |
Political party |
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Spouse(s) | Guy Scott |
Children | 4 |
Alma mater |
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Religion | Christianity |
Career
Professionally, Scott has worked in the fields of economic development policy, social development policy and NGOs for more than twenty years.[4][5] She headed the team which created and launched the Zambian Public Welfare Assistance Scheme, a social protection and poverty alleviation government program.[4] It was an early forerunner of the present-day conditional cash transfers (also called social cash transfers), which makes welfare programs conditional based upon the receivers' actions.[4][6] In 2014, two years after Scott left the program, her Zambian cash transfer program was named UNICEF's best global research program.[7]
Scott served as the Chief of Social Policy and Economic Analysis, Planning, Monitoring & Evaluation for UNICEF's Zambian branch for five years from 2007 until 2012.[4] She worked in nearly every district in Zambia in that position.[5] She stepped down for her position at UNICEF in 2011 when her husband was appointed Vice President of Zambia by President Sata.[5] United Nations regulations required that employees whose spouses attain high political office either step down from their job or taking another position with the United Nations in another country.[5] She chose to leave her post.[5]
By 2013, Scott had been appointed a Visiting Fellow of the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) at the University of Sussex.[4] She has publicly spoken out on a variety of societal issues affecting Zambia, including children's right, gender discrimination, violence against women, and women's access to education.[7]
Sata died in office on October 28, 2014.[8] Vice President Guy Scott succeeded Sata as the acting President of Zambia until a by-election could be held 90 days after Sata's death.[8] The events made Charlotte Scott the First Lady of Zambia during this time.[8] The couple became the country's first white President and First Lady.[8] Despite their new positions, the Scotts did not move into Government House, the residence of the country's president.[5] Guy Scott was barred by law from running for the remainder of Sata's unexpired presidential term because the Constitution of Zambia banned presidential candidates whose parents were not born in Zambia.[8] His parents had immigrated to present-day Zambia from England and Scotland in the United Kingdom.[8] Charlotte Scott left the position of First Lady on January 26, 2015, and was succeeded by Esther Lungu.
In 2016, Guy Scott decided would not seek re-election to his Lusaka Central seat in Parliament in the August general election.[9] Charlotte Scott applied to run for her husband's seat and was endorsed by the United Party for National Development (UPND) as the party's official nominee.[9] Scott and her main opponent, the PF's Margaret Mwanakatwe, were considered the front-runners for Lusaka Central during the election out of the five candidates for the seat.[9][7][10] On July 18, 2016, Scott and her supporters were attacked while campaigning in the Town Centre Market in Lusaka.[11] The attackers, who used stones and screwdrivers to chase Scott and her staff from the market, were supporters of the rival party, the Patriotic Front (PF), according to news reports.[11] Scott and her staff escaped unharmed, but their Toyota Land Cruiser suffered major damage during the attack.[11] She told a newspaper, "Our team did not retaliate. Why can’t we campaign in peace? This is completely unacceptable!"[11] The PF candidate, Margaret Mwanakatwe, defeated Scott in the general election on August 11, 2016.[12]
External links
- Official Twitter Account
References
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- ↑ Zambia's Guy Scott makes history as white president in sub-Saharan Africa, Faith Karimi, CNN, 10 June 2016.
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