Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[3]: 17 He started work as a journalist in 1967, working for the Golden City Post, feature writer for DRUM from 1969 until 1970, and as a political reporter for the Johannesburg Sunday Times in 1970. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] : 17 After the Soweto Riots in 1976, he joined Total Oil as a marketing executive.
Duma Joshua Kumalo (died 3 February 2006) was a South African human rights activist and one of the Sharpeville Six.He was condemned to death under the 1984 law of "common purpose", which allowed a person to be convicted for having been in the vicinity of an offence, without personally committing it.
A of the faction of the Khumalo family supporting Bulelani detailed how Bulelani Lobengula-Khumalo is the rightful heir through the tradition of Inkosi Izala Inkosi which states: "that one has to have been born to a mother who married to a king, that even if one is the biological son of the king one is disqualified from taking over the throne ...
Lobengula Khumalo (1845–1894), second and last king of the Ndebele people; Marwick Khumalo (living), member of the House of Assembly of Swaziland; Mbongeni Khumalo (born 1976), South African performance poet and writer; Moses Khumalo (1979–2006), South African jazz saxophonist; Mzi Khumalo (born 1955), South African businessman and mining ...
Lobengula Khumalo (c. 1835 – c. 1894) was the second and last official king of the Northern Ndebele people (historically called Matabele in English). Both names in the Ndebele language mean "the men of the long shields", a reference to the Ndebele warriors' use of the Nguni shield .
The Khumalo are an African clan that originated in northern KwaZulu, South Africa. The Khumalos are part of a group of Zulus and Ngunis known as the Mntungwa . Others include the Blose and Mabaso and Zikode , located between the Ndwandwe and the Mthethwa .
It’s been more than 22 years since 9/11 and more than 12 since Osama bin Laden’s death. But the al-Qaida leader’s open “Letter to America” attempting to justify the Sept. 11, 2001 ...
A Joint High Command created in March 1980 to oversee integration of the formerly belligerent Rhodesian Security Forces, Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army (ZANLA), and the Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army (ZIPRA) officially established the Zimbabwe National Army in late 1980, nearly a year after the end of the Rhodesian Bush War.