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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Anti-Kabila uprising in eastern Congo
By Martin McLaughlin
7 August 1998
An uprising by rebellious troops which began August 3 in the
eastern provinces of the Democratic Republic of Congo has spread
to other parts of the huge central African country and threatens
to involve neighboring countries as well.
The revolt is the product of a split within the US-backed group
which took power 15 months ago after a brief civil war against
the former longtime dictator of the country, Mobutu Sese Seko.
Laurent Kabila, who heads the new regime, has fallen out with
the military cadres supplied by the Rwandan government who spearheaded
his rise to power.
Rwandan Tutsi officers, dispatched by their US-trained commander,
Rwandan Vice President Paul Kagame, had mobilized local Congolese
Tutsis, called Banyamulenge, as the main fighting force against
Mobutu. But in recent months Kabila has sought to oust most of
the ethnic Tutsi officials in his government, including James
Kabari, his top military commander. On July 27 he ordered all
Rwandan Tutsi military personnel to return to Rwanda immediately.
The uprising began a few days later. Already the cities of
Goma and Bukavu in Kivu province have passed under rebel control,
and there have been reports of heavy fighting in Uvira and in
Kisangani, the strategic road and river transport center which
is the country's third largest city. United Nations officials
suspended relief operations in the region, where tens of thousands
have been displaced by the civil war in Rwanda and last year's
revolt against Mobutu.
On August 4 the uprising spread to the far west, near the Congo's
outlet to the Atlantic Ocean and its border with the oil-rich
Angolan enclave of Cabinda. Rwandan officers in the town of Kitona,
a center for the retraining of thousands of former Mobutu troops,
staged an uprising. The fighting spread Wednesday to the towns
of Muanda and Banana near Cabinda, where the American oil company
Chevron operates one of the most lucrative oil concessions in
the world.
In the capital city, Kinshasa, Kabila's forces remained in
control after clashes at two military bases outside the city.
More than 1,000 Rwandan and ethnic Tutsi soldiers were said to
have fled into the neighboring jungle, and Kabila issued shoot-to-kill
orders for any Rwandan soldiers found in the city.
The government staged an anti-Rwandan demonstration August
5, which was followed by mob attacks on Tutsi-owned shops. Kabila
lifted the dawn-to-dusk curfew which he had imposed three days
earlier, facilitating the looting.
One cause of the conflict between Kabila and his Rwandan backers
appears to be the regime's failure to suppress Hutu militias which
have staged raids from eastern Congo into Rwanda. It is not clear
whether the Rwandan leaders seek the outright overthrow of the
regime or to establish a sphere of influence in eastern Congo
and push back their Hutu opponents.
Two high-ranking ethnic Tutsi officials, Foreign Minister Bizima
Karaha and Presidential Affairs Minister Deogratias Bugera, fled
the country after the revolt. Karaha reappeared in Goma, together
with a longtime anti-Mobutu leader and former UNESCO official,
Arthur Zaidy Ngoma, and they declared themselves the civilian
political leadership of the rebellion. Karaha denied the uprising
was ethnic or tribal in character, declaring, "This is a
country-wide revolution to topple Kabila."
While purging Banyamulenge from his government and army and
encouraging pogroms against this ethnic minority, Kabila has filled
his government with his own personal and tribal following, drawn
from his home province of Shaba (Katanga), the location of most
of the Congo's mineral wealth.
His interior minister, Gaetan Kakudji, and his justice minister,
Mwenze Kongolo, are both his cousins, while his son Joseph is
deputy chief of army staff. The head of the national police force,
the chief of the armed forces, the governor of the central bank,
his ambassador-at-large and all new members of the presidential
guard are from Katanga.
There have also been widespread reports of personal corruption,
including the siphoning off of what little foreign aid is directed
to Congo, and claims that large cash deposits have been made on
behalf of Kabila in banks in Europe and in other African capitals.
The conflict in the Congo could easily spill into the nine
countries which are its neighbors--in addition to Rwanda, these
include Burundi, Uganda, Sudan, Central African Republic, Congo-Brazzaville,
Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Tanzania. In many cases tribal and
linguistic groups overlap the borders, which have been inherited
unchanged from the period of European colonialism.
A spokesman for Kabila's govenrment threatened to "extend
the war into Rwanda" if that country did not halt all backing
for the rebellion. He denounced Rwanda as "a criminal state."
Concerned over this prospect, Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe
is convening a summit conference Friday in Harare, with officials
of Congo, Rwanda, Uganda, Burundi, Zambia and Tanzania scheduled
to attend.
The US State Department dispatched its special envoy to central
Africa, former Congressman Howard Wolpe, to Kinshasa, and urged
all US citizens to leave the country. The Clinton administration
publicly urged other countries to stay out of the fighting in
the Congo. But there were indications that the US government is
itself backing the rebellion through its close ties with the Rwandan
regime.
The US European Command headquarters in Germany has confirmed,
in response to press inquiries, that American soldiers are now
on the border between Rwanda and Congo as part of the "Rwanda
Interagency Assessment Team" that has been in the country
for nearly two weeks and will remain for several more.
State Department spokesman James Rubin declined to make any
pledge of support for the Kabila government. "I'm not prepared
to comment on whether we would like to see a change in the Government
there," he told a press briefing, "that's not something
we normally do."
US dissatisfaction with Kabila is sparked not only by the corruption
and general incompetence of the regime, but by its failure to
carry out promised agreements with the big US and Canadian mining
companies which bankrolled his rise to power. The Wall Street
Journal noted August 5 that Kabila "has alienated potential
foreign investors, especially the crucial mining sector, by making
deals and then breaking them."
Underlying the crisis is the impact of the world financial
crisis on a Congolese economy that was left in shambles by three
decades of plundering by Mobutu and the longer term legacy of
colonial exploitation and oppression. Plunging prices of commodities
such as copper and cobalt, once the country's main exports, have
slashed the Congo's foreign exchange earnings. A report in mid-July
said that all economic indicators, including mineral production,
were down, and there has been virtually no new foreign investment
since Kabila came to power.
Foreign aid has not been enough to alleviate mass starvation,
let alone spark any economic development. The last meeting of
the country's foreign aid donors produced contributions totaling
only $32 million, about 75 cents for each of the Congo's 46 million
people.
See Also:
LTTE remains silent
International protests mount against arrest of Tamil socialists
in Sri Lanka
[7 August 1998]
Clinton's tour:
A bid to make Africa profitable for US capital
[26 March 1998]
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