Rhodesia
Rhodesia
Rhodesia
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Stalemate developed between the British and Rhodesian Prime Ministers, Harold
Wilson and Ian Smith respectively, between 1964 and 1965. Dispute largely
surrounded the British condition that the terms for independence had to be
acceptable "to the people of the country as a whole"; Smith contended that this
was met, while Britain and black nationalist leaders in Rhodesia held that it was
not. After Wilson proposed in late October 1965 that Britain might safeguard
future black representation in the Rhodesian parliament by withdrawing some of
the colonial government's devolved powers, then presented terms for an
investigatory Royal Commission that the Rhodesians found unacceptable, Smith
and his Cabinet declared independence. Calling this treasonous, the British
colonial Governor Sir Humphrey Gibbs formally dismissed Smith and his
government, but they ignored him and appointed an "Officer Administering the
Government" to take his place.
While no country recognised UDI, the Rhodesian High Court deemed the post-UDI
government legal and de jure in 1968. The Smith administration initially
professed continued loyalty to Queen Elizabeth II, but abandoned this in 1970
when it declared a republic in an unsuccessful attempt to win foreign recognition.
The Rhodesian Bush War, a guerrilla conflict between the government and two
rival communist-backed black nationalist groups, began in earnest two years
later, and after several attempts to end the war Smith agreed the Internal
Settlement with non-militant nationalists in 1978. Under these terms the country
was reconstituted under black rule as Zimbabwe Rhodesia in June 1979, but this
new order was rejected by the guerrillas and the international community. The
Bush War continued until Zimbabwe Rhodesia revoked UDI as part of the
Lancaster House Agreement in December 1979. Following a brief period of direct
British rule, the country was granted internationally recognised independence
under the name Zimbabwe in 1980.