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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
The Congo: President Kabila assassinated
By Chris Talbot
18 January 2001
Use
this version to print
President Laurent Kabila of the Democratic Republic of Congo
(DRC) was shot dead Tuesday afternoon, according to reports from
Belgium, Britain and the United States. However, some confusion
has been caused because at the time of writing the DRC government
claims that although shot, Kabila is still alive, and has named
his son as caretaker leader.
Press reports indicate that Kabila was shot by one of his bodyguards
in front of army generals, after a row in which he had sacked
them. Belgian Foreign Minister Louis Michel confirmed the involvement
of army chiefs and claimed that the killing was not a coup attempt,
but an argument that descended into violence. There
were reports of heavy fighting around the presidential palace
for half an hour, after which calm descended in the capital Kinshasa.
It appears that presidential chief of staff Colonel Eddy Kapend
has taken temporary control of the country. He appealed on television
for discipline in the army.
Other Western press reports have followed Michel in playing
down the possibility of a coup. However it seems that the row
with army chiefs was over the course of the war in the Congo and
that the military top brass removed Kabila because he was standing
in the way of a negotiated settlement.
DRC government forces, backed by Angola and Zimbabwe, have
recently suffered set backs in the south-eastern province of Katanga
at the hands of Rwandan troops and Rwandan backed rebels. Similarly
in the northern Equateur region, DRC forces have lost out in clashes
with Jean-Pierre Bemba's Movement for the Liberation of the Congo
(MLC) forces, which are backed by Uganda.
The Washington Post quote a Kinshasa-based analyst,
who reported that elements in the army were feeling out support
from foreign governments for a move against Kabila: there
has been some disillusionment among some elements of the army,
and they have been making independent approaches among other people
to support them.
Original press reports were of Kabila being shot, but expressed
uncertainty about whether he had been killed. Ugandan involvement
in the assassination may be indicated by the fact that only Ugandan
reports were positive that Kabila was dead. A senior intelligence
source in Kampala telephoned Reuters saying I am 101 percent
sure he is dead.
Pointing to the role of Uganda, a country which receives military
backing from the United States, the Belgian newspaper Le Soir
stated that: It is more than probable that this coup has
been carried out with the consent of the United States.
Le Soir claimed that semi-official sources
in the US have been saying for several days that nothing further
could be done about a peace deal in the Congo while Kabila was
still in power. They described a scenario in which, after the
disappearance of the president, the team around ex-President
Masire of Botswana, who had negotiated the failed Congo peace
deal at Lusaka in the summer of 1999, would install an interim
administration that would proceed with their original mission
of organising an inter-Congolese dialogue. This idea,
put forward at Lusaka, is for all the countries to pull out from
the DRC, whilst a new political framework is established between
the Kinshasa regime and the Ugandan and Rwandan-backed rebels.
Le Soir further suggested that elements of the old Mobutu
regime could be brought back into power: But the interim
administration could also open the way for the rebel Jean-Pierre
Bemba to return backed by the old Mobutists, who count numerous
friends among the ranks of the Republicans and who have already
been contacted by the future American Vice-President Dick Cheney.
Kabila overthrew the US-backed regime of Mobutu Sese Seku in
May 1997. It was notorious for its brutality and corruption. For
three decades, the economy was run into a state of collapse. Mobutu
was a personal friend of the Bush family.
A further indication of possible US involvement is the fact
that the assassination occurred on the eve of a French-Africa
summit to be held at Yaounde, Cameroon. The summit, entitled Globalisation
and Africa, is to be attended by some 30 African heads of
state. It is intended to boost French policies in Africa and offset
US influence on the continent. France's overseas development Minister
Charles Josselin attempted to distance his government from any
connection with corruption scandals in Africa, including those
involving former French President Mitterand's son, by stressing
the fact that France is the largest development aid donor to sub-Saharan
Africa.
Kabila was clearly hoping to strengthen his position by gaining
support at this meeting. After the military reverses, he had made
what the French newspaper Libération described as
two small victories. One was passage of the United
Nations Security Council resolution in December, strongly backed
by France, demanding that Rwanda and Uganda withdraw. The second
was an agreement negotiated personally by Kabila last week at
Libreville, Gabon between President Buyoya of Burundi and the
Hutu militia, the FDD, who had been conducting a civil war with
the Burundi regime from bases inside the Congo. The intention
was to get Burundi, whose forces have been backing Rwanda, out
of the Congo war. Hutu militia, numbering as many as 40,000, and
including the Interhamwe, the rump of the Rwandan regime that
carried out the 1994 genocide, have made up a major part of Kabila's
forces.
In the 1960s, Kabila had led a guerrilla struggle against the
Mobutu regime. One of his claims to fame was a meeting with Che
Guevara, although Guevara apparently considered him a liabilitywho
spent more time in bars and brothels than in politics. Kabila's
group controlled a tiny region in the South Kivu region of the
Congo, where it was sustained by gold mining and ivory trading,
and where the group is said to have brutalised the local population.
In the 1980s Kabila moved to Dar es Salaam, selling gold mined
in the Congo. Here in 1996, he was contacted by fellow Pan-Africanist
Julius Nyerere, the former President of Tanzania. Kabila was taken
up by his former Pan-African associates President Museveni of
Uganda and the then Vice-President of Rwanda Paul Kagame. Like
them, Kabila had abandoned any pretence of Marxism and was a committed
supporter of the profit system.
Uganda and Rwanda were fighting against the Interhamwe in eastern
Congo, then called Zaire. But because of the collapse of Mobutu's
army they soon swept across the country and installed Kabila in
power in 1997. With his anti-imperialist rhetoric, Kabila was
initially very popular amongst the Congo population. The US clearly
hoped he would become one of the new African leaders,
like Museveni and Kagame, who were being lauded by President Clinton.
They believed that Kabila, the Pan-Africanist turned free-marketeer,
would bring stability to this huge country, and provide access
to its considerable mineral wealth.
After little more than a year in power, however, Kabila broke
from his Ugandan and Rwandan backers. The two countries supported
rebel forces in an attempt to oust Kabila, but with backing from
Angola, Zimbabwe and Namibia, he hung on to power and the civil
war began. Now that Angola and Zimbabwe are under pressure from
the West to pull out, and the economy of the DRC has all but collapsed,
it is unlikely that Kabila's removal will bring stability to a
region dominated by numerous rival factions, and where the tribalist
conflicts created by colonialism are rife. Moreover, the rival
imperialist powersFrance, Belgium, and Britain, as well
as the United Statesall have an abiding interest in the
region.
See Also:
The Congo: How and why the West organised
Lumumba's assassination
Review of two BBC documentaries: Who Killed Lumumba?, and
Mobutu
[10 January 2001]
Rwanda on the offensive
in Congo War
[23 December 2000]
Congo
(DRC)
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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