On this date in 1968, Rhodesia earned global opprobrium with a triple hanging in Salisbury (today known as Harare).
This was the first “Rhodesian” execution, three years on into the white-supremacist (pdf) breakaway state — which had bucked orderly majority-rule decolonization by declaring independence under its settler government.
So it was hardly a matter of whether James Dhlamini, Victor Mlambo and Duly Shadrack were or were not “guilty”: springing the trap on the gallows was an act fraught with racial hostility within Rhodesia (today, Zimbabwe) and throughout a decolonizing world.
Queen Elizabeth II issued a royal reprieve and the British government warned of the “gravest personal responsibility” attaching to anyone who involved himself in the proposed hanging. Rhodesia royally ignored it.
I have been hanging people for years, but I have never had all this fuss before.
–(white) executioner Ted “Lofty” Milton (n.b. seemingly pictured here)
“This fuss” would encompass cross-partisan fury in the British House of Commons as well as a moment of silence in the Indian parliament, denunciations by both America and the Soviet Union … basically everybody. Tanzanian-born British M.P. Andrew Faulds called for criminal sanctions “not excluding the death penalty”. (London Times, , Mar. 7 1968)
There were even demands for humanitarian intervention — amounting to a British military occupation — to protect the other hundred-plus blacks then awaiting the gallows. Needless to say, that wasn’t about to happen, so in the face of Salisbury’s intransigence, was it all just sound and fury?
Does the Secretary of State recall that it was Winston Churchill who said: “Grass grows quickly over the battlefield; over the scaffold, never.”?
-Still-sitting Conservative M.P. Peter Tapsell — then a pup of 38, now the Father of the House — during Parliament’s emotional March 6 debate
Rhodesia insisted on the point by hanging two more Africans five days afterwards … but it also announced 35 reprieves.
In its fifteen years, Rhodesia never did get itself clear of the fuss over white rule; it remained a global pariah and eventually succumbed to its long-running Bush War.
On this day..
- 1966: Leftists during the Guatemalan Civil War
- 1855: Manuel da Mota Coquiero, the Beast of Macabu
- 1943: Leen Kullman, Soviet hero
- 1731: Six malefactors at Tyburn
- 845: The 42 Martyrs of Amorium
- 2014: Amin Abdullah Mohammed Al-Mu'alimi, an American spy in the Arabian peninsula
- 1868: Joseph Eisele, honest, kind-hearted triple murderer
- 1673: The effigy of Charles Alexis dit Dessessards
- 1906: The would-be assassins of General Rafael Reyes
- 1900: Ada Chard Williams, the last woman hanged at Newgate
- 1836: The defenders of the Alamo, much remembered
- 1952: Jurgen Stroop, the Warsaw Ghetto's destroyer