Chalo Chatu:Today's featured article/May 15, 2018: Difference between revisions

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{{TFAIMAGE|Nationalists.jpg}} '''Lilian Burton''' was a white settler who was killed by [[United National Independence Party|UNIP]] activists who were demonstrating against the colonial regime in [[Ndola]]. This was during the [[Cha Cha Cha Uprising]] in 1960. Before she died from the burns sustained in the attack, she reportedly implored European settlers across the country not to avenge her misfortune by indiscriminately attacking Africans. Her husband Robert Burton echoed the appeal in several heart-rending interviews with the print media after his wife's death. {{TFAFULL|Lilian Burton}}
'''Lilian Burton''' was a white settler who was killed by [[United National Independence Party|UNIP]] activists who were demonstrating against the colonial regime in [[Ndola]]. This was during the [[Cha Cha Cha Uprising]] in 1960. Before she died from the burns sustained in the attack, she reportedly implored European settlers across the country not to avenge her misfortune by indiscriminately attacking Africans. Her husband Robert Burton echoed the appeal in several heart-rending interviews with the print media after his wife's death. In spite of these appeals, the Lilian Burton atrocity soon turned into the centerpiece of of a raging political storm involving white settlers, African nationalists, colonial and federal authorities in Central Africa and their superiors in England, {{TFAFULL|Lilian Burton}}
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* [[Crawford Mandumbwa]]
* [[Crawford Mandumbwa]]

Latest revision as of 12:39, 25 April 2018

Lilian Burton was a white settler who was killed by UNIP activists who were demonstrating against the colonial regime in Ndola. This was during the Cha Cha Cha Uprising in 1960. Before she died from the burns sustained in the attack, she reportedly implored European settlers across the country not to avenge her misfortune by indiscriminately attacking Africans. Her husband Robert Burton echoed the appeal in several heart-rending interviews with the print media after his wife's death. In spite of these appeals, the Lilian Burton atrocity soon turned into the centerpiece of of a raging political storm involving white settlers, African nationalists, colonial and federal authorities in Central Africa and their superiors in England, (Full article...)