Judith Todd (b.1943) is a Zimbabwean political activist who opposed the minority government of Ian Smith in Rhodesia from the 1960s. Todd was arrested in 1972 and then expelled from the country, settling in London and founding the Zimbabwe Project Trust. She returned to an independent Zimbabwe in 1980, where she has been a strong critic of Robert Mugabe’s rule. Todd’s father, Garfield Todd, was Rhodesia’s Prime Minister from 1953 to 1958.
Recent Posts
- Interview with Sir John Major
- Witness Seminar – Britain in the Commonwealth: The 1997 Edinburgh Commonwealth heads of Government meeting
- Interview with Hon Alexander Downer
- Interview with Abdul Minty
- Interview with Billie Miller
- Interview with Kamalesh Sharma
- Interview with Dorienne Rowan-Campbell
- Witness Seminar Participants, March 2014
- Witness Seminar – The Commonwealth Secretariat, Economics and Development, and Global Politics
- Commonwealth Diplomacy and the End of Apartheid. Anthony Law Commonwealth Lecture by former Australian Foreign Minister Gareth Evans