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The Congo: How and why the West organised Lumumba's assassination
Review of two BBC documentaries: Who Killed Lumumba?,
and Mobutu
By Linda Slattery
10 January 2001
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Later this year the Belgian parliament is due to report on
the murder of the Congo's first prime minister after independence,
Patrice Lumumba in January 1961. The circumstances of Lumumba's
death have been shrouded in mystery for forty years, but as the
Congo's vast mineral wealth is once again becoming a focus for
imperialist rivalries, documents long hidden in official archives
have been brought to light.
Last year, the BBC ran two documentaries on the tragic history
of this central African state. Who Killed Lumumba?, was
screened as part of the channel's Correspondent series.
It drew heavily on the forthcoming new book by Belgian historian
Ludo de Witte (The Murder of Lumumba, Verso Books, ISBN:
1859846181, published June 2001). De Witte has put together the
facts of the case from official Belgian archives and the documentary
also used archive film footage and interviewed surviving witnesses,
to show that Lumumba was murdered in a plot masterminded by Western
governments.
Mobutu, from the BBC's Storyville documentary
series, reveals how the Western powers put Joseph Sese Seko Mobutu
in power after the death of Lumumba, keeping him there for 32
years while he systematically looted the country. Mobutu became
the west's main Cold War ally in Africa, and the Congo formed
the staging post for CIA operations against Soviet-backed African
regimes.
The film reveals the very close personal and political relationship
that existed between Mobutu and several Western leaders. We see
film clips of Mobutu being embraced by Jacques Chirac (now President
of France), and sitting next to the British Queen in the royal
carriage. For many years, until he fell out of favour at the end
of the Cold War, Mobutu remained a friend of the Belgian king,
but his closest friends were President George Bush Snr. and his
family.
Between 1885 and 1908, some five to eight million fell victim
to King Leopold of Belgium's personal rule over the Congo, under
a barbarous system of forced labour and systematic terror. In
1959, the Belgium government finally decided to grant the Congo
independence. The first elections brought Patrice Lumumba to power
as prime minister. But his government was an unstable coalition
of regional interests, and collapsed within a week. Sections of
the army mutinied and the mineral rich province of Katanga seceded.
Who Killed Lumumba? featured important new material
about the Katanga secession. Ludo de Witte has uncovered documents
in the Belgian archives showing that Moise Tshombe, who led the
secession, acted on orders from the Belgian government, which
has always claimed that it only sent troops into Katanga to protect
Belgian lives and property. De Witte's researches have shown that
the Belgians plotted to dismember the Congo.
US Documents released last August reveal that President Eisenhower
directly ordered the CIA to assassinate Lumumba. Minutes of an
August 1960 National Security Council meeting confirm that Eisenhower
told CIA chief Allen Dulles to eliminate Lumumba.
The official note taker, Robert H. Johnson, had told the Senate
Intelligence Committee this in 1975, but no documentary evidence
was previously available to back up his statement.
Larry Devlin, the CIA's man in the Congo at the time, told
the BBC filmmakers how he had been told to meet Joe from
Paris, who turned out to be the CIA's chief technical officer,
Dr Sidney Gottlieb. I recognised him as he walked towards
my car, recalled Devlin, but when he told me what
they wanted done I was totally, totally taken aback. Gottlieb
gave him a tube of poisoned toothpaste, which Devlin was to smuggle
into Lumumba's bathroom.
He claims he never did so, because I had never suggested
assassination, nor did I believe it was advisable. Instead,
I threw it in the Congo River when its usefulness had expired.
The usefulness of the poison expired rather quickly
because Lumumba was murdered very soon afterwards, at the hands
of Belgian agents.
Eisenhower was not alone in coming to the conclusion that Lumumba
must die. A British Foreign Office document from September 1960
notes the opinion of a top ranking official, who later became
the head of MI5, that, "I see only two possible solutions
to the [Lumumba] problem. The first is the simple one of ensuring
[his] removal from the scene by killing him." What steps,
if any, were taken to put this plan into action remain unknown.
De Witte's work reveals the steps that the Belgian government
took to remove Lumumba. Belgian military chiefs made nightly visits
to Mobutu, then head of the army, and President Kasavubu, to plot
Lumumba's downfall. Colonel Louis Maliere spoke of the millions
of francs he brought over for this purpose. The plot to kill Lumumba
was called Operation Barracuda and was run by the
Belgian Minister for African Affairs, Count d'Aspremont.
The Belgium government ordered Kasavubu to sack Lumumba, who
turned to the new parliament and won two votes of confidence.
Mobutu then lead a coup d'état and Lumumba was placed under
house arrest, from which he escaped only to be captured by troops
loyal to Mobutu.
Contemporary film shows UN troops standing by while Lumumba
is first beaten in front of Mobutu, then paraded through the streets
of Leopoldville (now Kinshasa) and finally beaten again. When
taken to Thysville prison, he almost provoked a mutiny among the
guards.
Count d'Aspremont ordered him be taken to Katanga province
and certain death. On the flight there, he and two supportersMaurice
Mpolo and Joseph Okitewere beaten so badly the pilot complained
the plane was in danger of crashing. All three were shot by a
firing squad commanded by Belgian officers and watched by Moise
Tshombe.
The Belgian commander of the Katangan police force, Gerard
Soete, was given the grisly job of destroying the bodies. Enlisting
the support of a friend, they chopped up the corpses before dissolving
them in acid. Soete recalls that they were drunk for the two days
because, We did things an animal wouldn't do.
Both these films do a valuable job in bringing to the attention
of a wider audience the new evidence about Lumumba's death and
in revealing the way in which the imperialist powers supported
Mobutu's dictatorial regime. However, what neither of them fully
explains is why the West acted as it did. They present the assassination
of Lumumba and the installation of Mobutu as simply part of the
Cold War rivalry between the West and Moscow.
The central mystery of Lumumba's death remains. Why was he
killed? Why was the might of at least three Western powers bent
on eliminating this one maneven as he was held prisoner,
reviled and beaten by his captors and was without military or
political power. Some say the answer is that he posed a threat
to the West because he was a committed Pan-Africanist, and since
his death he has certainly taken on the status of a Pan-African
martyr.
By late 1959 Britain and America had concluded that, far from
representing a threat, Pan-Africanism offered the best chance
for preventing revolution in Africa. And Pan-Africanists of much
longer standing than Lumumba, such as Nkrumah, Kenyatta, Nyerere,
Obote and Azikiwe had also come to power around this time.
The experience of the Congo, with its million-strong working
class the largest on the continent outside South Africa, was a
powerful factor in bringing them to that conclusion. When strikes
and demonstrations broke out in 1959 as the mineral boom ended,
the Belgian government decided to grant its colony independence.
Their repressive apparatus was geared up to brutalising a divided
and dispersed rural population, not an increasingly well-organised
working class that was losing its local and communal loyalties.
When Lumumba showed that he could not be relied upon to control
the Congolese working class, his fate was sealed. The West decided
to make an example of him to the masses and to other African leaders,
to show what would happen if they opposed imperialist dictates.
Mobutu, who had impressed the CIA on his brief visits to Brussels
as Lumumba's secretary, was chosen as the better candidate to
safeguard Western interests. Through a mixture of brutality and
political guile, Mobutu succeeded in ensuring that the Congo (renamed
Zaire) did not become the flashpoint for an African socialist
revolution.
See Also:
Belgium's imperialist
rape of Africa: King Leopold's Ghost A story of greed,
terror and heroism in colonial Africa
[6 September 1999]
Congo
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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