Peter Youens
Sir Peter William Youens | |
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King Edward VII School | |
Alma mater | Wadham College, Oxford |
Sir Peter William Youens, CMG, OBE (19 April 1916 – 6 May 2000) was a British diplomat who played an important role in the transition of Nyasaland to independence as Malawi in 1964. He was Deputy Chief Secretary of Nyasaland from 1953 to 1963, and secretary to the Prime Minister and the Cabinet of Malawi from 1963 to 1966, where he enjoyed the confidence of the prime minister Hastings Banda (who became President of Malawi in 1966). After leaving Malawi he was prominent as a director of Lonrho.
Early life and career
Youens' father was a clergyman in
He joined the British Colonial Administrative Service in 1938. After service in the Navy he became assistant district commissioner and then district commissioner in Sierra Leone, before moving to Nyasaland as assistant secretary in 1951.
Youens was appointed OBE in 1960, CMG in 1962, and was knighted in 1965.
Nyasaland and Malawi
Youens was deputy chief secretary in the British colonial administration of
When Banda became Prime Minister in 1963, he asked for Youens as his private secretary. Youens remained in this post until 1966, when Banda declared Malawi a republic with himself as president.[4]
Lonrho
In the 1960s Tiny Rowland, the managing director of Lonrho, was establishing links with African leaders in connection with Lonrho's assets, which included sugar plantations and railway interests in Malawi.
Youens became one of Rowland's friends and after retiring from Malawi in 1966, became an executive director of Lonrho. He left Lonrho in 1969 to join John Tyzack & Partners, but returned to the Lonrho board in 1980 where he remained until 1994, after control of Lonrho had passed from Rowland to the German businessman Dieter Bock.[4]
Death
Youens died on 6 May 2000 in his home of London, England, from complications of pneumonia.
References
- ^ Photo from the Old Edwardians website
- ^ School magazine, Dec 1934
- ^ Obituary in the Daily Telegraph
- ^ a b "Sir Peter Youens". The Guardian. 9 June 2000. Archived from the original on 25 April 2023.