Southern Rhodesia Act 1965


The Southern Rhodesia Act 1965 c. 76 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It was designed to reaffirm British legal rule in Southern Rhodesia after Rhodesia had unilaterally declared independence. In practice it only enforced the status of Southern Rhodesia as a British colony in British constitutional theory as the Rhodesian government did not recognise it.

History

On 11 November 1965, the Prime Minister of Southern Rhodesia Ian Smith declared Rhodesia's Unilateral Declaration of Independence from the British Empire after the British government refused to grant independence while white minority rule was still in place. Within five days, the Southern Rhodesia Act 1965 had passed through Parliament and had received royal assent from Queen Elizabeth II. The Southern Rhodesia Act 1965 stated that Southern Rhodesia was still legally a British colony and affirmed to the queen the power to govern Southern Rhodesia via Orders in Council including amending the constitution and enforce legal restrictions upon them unilaterally.

Effect

The first use of the Act was when the queen issued an Order-in-Council to suspend the Southern Rhodesian Constitution and legally sacked the Rhodesian Front government. The Act was intended to show that the British government alone had authority in Southern Rhodesia in theory. However in practice the act was largely ignored in Rhodesia and the government continued to meet as they considered that it was in violation of the constitutional convention that the British parliament did not legislate for Southern Rhodesia. Though they initially maintained allegiance to Queen Elizabeth II as Queen of Rhodesia, in 1970 they declared themselves a republic after the Queen refused to recognise the title. In 1978, when Southern Rhodesia proposed an Internal Settlement to instigate black majority rule, the United Nations rejected it. The Act was repealed by the Zimbabwe Act 1979 after Rhodesia voluntarily returned to its former status as a British colony in order for elections and the eventual independence of Zimbabwe.