Simakade 【VALIDATED · 2025】
As of April 2026, the legal path for Prince Simakade's claim to the throne has been exhausted. In February 2026, the Constitutional Court of South Africa dismissed his application for leave to appeal a previous Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) ruling. The court found no reasonable prospects of success in his challenge against the recognition of King Misuzulu kaZwelithini as the legitimate monarch.
Legal teams and royal experts emphasized that Misuzulu was born to Queen Mantfombi Dlamini Zulu, whose lobolo was paid for by the Zulu nation, making her the "Great Wife" whose male offspring take precedence in the line of succession. Ongoing Defiance and Unity Calls Simakade
Despite the Constitutional Court's decision, Prince Simakade has remained defiant, labeling the verdict a "political judgment" and refusing to immediately accept King Misuzulu’s calls for peace and unity. His faction has suggested that while the legal route is closed, they will only reconcile if a new nomination process is initiated—a demand that conflicts with the settled status of the throne. As of April 2026, the legal path for
Supporters argued that as the first-born son of the late King, he was the rightful heir according to primogeniture. They also challenged the validity of King Goodwill Zwelithini's will and the identification process led by the late Traditional Prime Minister, Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi. Legal teams and royal experts emphasized that Misuzulu
Prince Simakade Zulu, the eldest son of the late King Goodwill Zwelithini kaBhekuzulu, remains a central figure in the Zulu royal succession dispute, even as South African courts have reached a definitive legal conclusion on the matter.
Experts from IOL News have warned that continued defiance of the apex court's ruling could potentially lead to contempt of court charges. For the Zulu nation, the focus has shifted toward reconciliation and stabilizing the monarchy under King Misuzulu. EXPLAINER | King Misuzulu and Prince Simakade - News24
The dispute between the half-brothers centered on different interpretations of traditional Zulu custom: