Dem.
Rep. Congo (Zaire)
The Congo, in
west-central Africa, is bordered by the Republic of Congo, the Central African
Republic, the Sudan, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania, Zambia, Angola, and the
Atlantic Ocean. It is one-quarter the size of the U.S. The principal rivers are
the Ubangi and Bomu in the north and the Congo in the west, which flows into the
Atlantic. The entire length of Lake Tanganyika lies along the eastern border
with Tanzania and Burundi.
Government
Transitional
government.
History
Formerly the Belgian
Congo, this territory was inhabited by ancient Negrito peoples (Pygmies), who
were pushed into the mountains by Bantu and Nilotic invaders. The American
correspondent Henry M. Stanley navigated the Congo River in 1877 and opened the
interior to exploration. Commissioned by King Leopold II of the Belgians,
Stanley made treaties with native chiefs that enabled the king to obtain
personal title to the territory at the Berlin Conference of 1885.
Leopold accumulated a vast personal fortune from
ivory and rubber through Congolese slave labor; 10 million people are estimated
to have died from forced labor, starvation, and outright extermination during
Leopold's colonial rule. His brutal exploitation of the Congo eventually became
an international cause célèbre, prompting Belgium to take over administration of
the Congo, which remained a colony until agitation for independence forced
Brussels to grant freedom on June 30, 1960. In elections that month, two
prominent nationalists won: Patrice Lumumba of the leftist Mouvement National
Congolais became prime minister and Joseph Kasavubu of the ABAKO Party became
head of state.
But within weeks of independence, the Katanga Province, led by Moise Tshombe,
seceded from the new republic, and another mining province, South Kasai,
followed. Belgium sent paratroopers to quell the civil war, and the United
Nations flew in a peacekeeping force.
Newly Independent Congo Plunges
into Civil War
Kasavubu staged an army coup in 1960 and handed
Lumumba over to the Katangan forces. A UN investigating commission found that
Lumumba had been killed by a Belgian mercenary in the presence of Tshombe, who
was then the president of Katanga. U.S. and Belgian involvement in the
assassination have been alleged. In a possibly related development, Dag
Hammarskjold, UN secretary-general, died in a plane crash en route to a peace
conference with Tshombe on Sept. 17, 1961.
Tshombe rejected a national reconciliation plan
submitted by the UN in 1962. Tshombe's troops fired on the UN force in December,
and in the ensuing conflict Tshombe capitulated on Jan. 14, 1963. The
peacekeeping force withdrew, and, in a complete about-face, Kasavubu named
Tshombe premier in order to fight a spreading rebellion. Tshombe used foreign
mercenaries, and, with the help of Belgian paratroops airlifted by U.S. planes,
defeated the most serious opposition, a Communist-backed regime in the
northeast.
Power-Hungry Mobutu Gains Control,
Wreaks Havoc
Kasavubu abruptly dismissed Tshombe in 1965 but was
then himself ousted by Gen. Joseph-Desiré Mobutu, army chief of staff. The new
president nationalized the Union Minière, the Belgian copper mining enterprise
that had been a dominant force in the Congo since colonial days. Mobutu
eliminated opposition to win the election in 1970. In 1975, he nationalized much
of the economy, barred religious instruction in schools, and decreed the
adoption of African names. He changed the country's name to Zaire and his own to
Mobuto Sese Seko, which means “the all-powerful warrior who, because of his
endurance and inflexible will to win, will go from conquest to conquest leaving
fire in his wake.” In 1977, invaders from Angola calling themselves the
Congolese National Liberation Front pushed into Shaba (Katanga) and threatened
the important mining center of Kolwezi. France and Belgium provided military aid
to defeat the rebels.
Laurent Kabila Topples Mobutu
Laurent Kabila and his long-standing but
little-known guerrilla movement launched a seven-month campaign that ousted
Mobutu in May 1997, ending one of the world's most corrupt and megalomaniacal
regimes. The last of the CIA-nurtured cold war despots, Mobutu deftly courted
France and the U.S., which used Zaire as a launching pad for covert operations
against bordering countries, particularly Marxist Angola. Mobutu's disastrous
policies drove his country into economic collapse while he siphoned off millions
of dollars for himself.
The country was renamed the Democratic Republic of
the Congo in 1997, which had been its name before Mobutu changed it to Zaire in
1971. But elation over Mobutu's downfall faded as Kabila's own autocratic style
emerged, and he seemed devoid of a clear plan for reconstructing the country. In
Aug. 1998, Congolese rebel forces, backed by Kabila's former allies, Rwanda and
Uganda, gained control of a large portion of the country until Angolan,
Namibian, and Zimbabwean troops came to Kabila's aid. In 1999, the Lusaka Accord
was signed by all six of the countries involved, as well as by most, but not
all, of the various rebel groups.
Son of Assassinated Leader Kabila
Oversees End of Congo's Civil War
In Jan. 2001, Kabila was assassinated, allegedly by
one of his bodyguards. His young and inexperienced son Joseph became the new
president. He demonstrated a willingness to engage in talks to end the civil
war. In April 2002, the government agreed to a power-sharing arrangement with
Ugandan-supported rebels and signed a peace accord with Rwanda and Uganda. More
than 2.5 million people are estimated to have died in the Congo's complex
four-year civil war, which involved seven foreign armies and numerous rebel
groups that often fought among themselves.
On July 17, 2003, the Congo's new power-sharing
government was inaugurated, but the fighting and killing continued. In April
2003, hundreds of civilians were massacred in the eastern province of Ituri in
an ethnic conflict. In 2004, an insurgency in Bukavu erupted, other areas of the
Congo grew restive, and Rwanda continued to support various rebel groups
fighting the government. By the end of 2004, the death toll from the conflict
had reached 3.8 million.
Political Progress Is Made Whilte
Death Toll Mounts
Despite instability, political progress continued.
In May 2005, a new constitution was adopted by the national assembly, and
overwhelmingly ratified in Jan. 2006. On July 30, 2006, the first democratic
election in the country since 1970 took place. President Kabila received 44.8%
of the vote, which was not enough to win the election outright. Fighting broke
out between factions supporting the two major candidates, setting off the worst
violence the country has seen since the 2002 peace deal was signed. Kabila was
declared the winner in the October run-off election, winning 58% of the vote,
the country's first freely elected president in four decades.
In August 2007, a rebel general, Laurent Nkunda, led
battles between his militia, made up of fellow Tutsis, and the Congolese Army.
The fighting continued throughout the year, driving hundreds of thousands of
people from their homes in eastern Congo and threatening to spiral the already
fragile country back into civil war. Nkunda claimed he was protecting Tutsis
from extremist Rwandan Hutus. In January 2008, the government and the rebels
signed an agreement that has both sides withdrawing their troops and the rebels
disarming and eventually being integrated into the national army. The cease-fire
fell apart in August, and fighting resumed between Nkunda's militia and the
army. By the end of October, the rebels had captured the major army base of
Rumangaboebel and were advancing towad Goma, the capital of North Kivu province.
In addition, angry civilians attacked UN peacekeeping troops, who proved
ineffectual in both thwarting the rebels and protecting citizens. The rebels
declared a cease-fire before taking Goma. With the cease-fire appearing on the
brink of collapse, leaders from several African nations and Ban Ki-moon, the
secretary-general of the UN met in Nairobi in November. They signed a pact that
calls for an immediate end to the fighting and agreed that if UN troops fail to
protect civilians, then African peaceekeepers would take over.
A report released in January 2008 by the
International Rescue Committee found that despite billions in aid, the
deployment of the world's largest peacekeeping force, and successful democratic
elections, some 45,000 people continue die each month in Congo, mostly from
starvation and disease.
Prime Minister Antoine Gizenga resigned in September 2008, citing health
reasons.