|
[Most of the] groups that relied on violence to overthrow Mobutu, ...have
depended on foreign support. The People's Revolutionary Party (Parti Révolutionnaire
du Peuple--PRP) may be an exception to this rule...
Headed by Laurent Kabila, a leader of the Lumumbist insurrection of 1964-65,
the PRP maintained a "liberated zone" in the Fizi area of southeastern
Kivu (in present-day Sud-Kivu). This zone had been out of government control
since 1964. PRP forces in the area apparently existed in symbiosis with the
government forces sent to exterminate them. Assignment to that theater of
operations reportedly was popular with Zairian military officers, who profited
from smuggling gold, ivory, and other commodities out of the PRP zone.
In contrast to the FLNC, the PRP had a well-defined program for social
revolution. According to one publication, it foresaw regrouping peasants in cités
agricoles, which would be organized as agricultural cooperatives, and
equipped with a dispensary, maternity clinic, nursery school, playing fields,
movie theater, market, and branch of the savings bank. It was unclear how this
socialist paradise in rural Zaire would be financed.
The PRP was briefly in the headlines in 1975, when its guerrillas kidnapped
four foreigners (three American, one Dutch) at a Tanzanian wildlife research
station. In 1984 and again in 1985, the PRP captured the town of Moba (eastern
Shaba, on Lake Tanganyika) before being expelled each time by the Zairian army.
The government claimed that 1,500 PRP fighters surrendered in 1986, but in the
early 1990s, the PRP apparently held its small pocket of rural territory...
Zaire's relations with Tanzania have been similarly strained because of
Kinshasa's belief that Tanzania supported and harbored Zairian insurgents,
specifically the PRP. This organization caused extreme embarrassment to
the Zairian government in 1984 and again in 1985 when it captured the Zairian
town of Moba along the shores of Lake Tanganyika. Although in both instances
Zairian government forces were able to recapture the town a few days later,
their demonstrated lack of control in integral parts of Zairian territory and
the poor performance of the Zairian troops who fled before the PRP were
sore points for Kinshasa. Nevertheless, although the Zairian government accused
Tanzania of active complicity in these attacks, observers believed it unlikely
that Dar es Salaam did more than provide safe haven for the PRP.
Much of the distrust centered on the poor relations between Mobutu and
Tanzania's former president, Julius Nyerere. Mobutu opposed Nyerere's socialist
orientation, and Nyerere considered Mobutu a puppet of the United States.
Nevertheless, Mobutu's relations with Nyerere's successor, Ali Hassan Mwinyi,
seemed much better, particularly when the latter stated that he would not permit
insurgents to use his country as a springboard for attacks against a neighboring
country. Observers believe that this remark, along with Tanzanian support for
President Mobutu's efforts to mediate national reconciliation in Angola, might
presage greater cooperation between the two countries...
Political resistance to the one-party regime was also accompanied by sporadic
guerrilla activity. Guerrilla resistance centered on the activities of several
insurgent groups. For example, on November 12, 1984, some 200 rebels belonging
to the People's Revolutionary Party (Parti Révolutionnaire du Peuple-- PRP), a
force that had operated for years in the rugged mountains near Lake Tanganyika,
temporarily seized and occupied Moba, a town on the shores of Lake Tanganyika.
Elements of the 31st Airborne Brigade recaptured the town two days later. Again
in 1985, the PRP briefly occupied Moba on June 17, but its forces were quickly
dislodged. Although Moba possessed no strategic importance, its capture had
significant psychological importance. It demonstrated that the Zairian
government was still unable to exercise effective control over portions of the
country. Even more important, the Moba incidents vividly demonstrated the
incompetence of the front-line Zairian units stationed in the interior,
notwithstanding the 31st Airborne Brigade's recapture of the town. The PRP was
officially registered as an opposition party in late 1990.
*****
An eight-month-long campaign under rebel leader Laurent Kabila (1940-)
overthrew in 1997 Africa's longest-ruling dictator, President Mobutu Sese Seko
(formerly Joseph D. Mobutu) (1930-97), whose plundering of Zaire's abundant
natural resources had left the country's economy in ruins after 30 years. Kabila,
headquartered around Lake Tanganyika in eastern Zaire, had been sporadically and
ineffectively fighting Mobutu since the latter seized power in 1965. Kabila's
opportunity to definitively oust Mobutu came in the fall of 1996, when tensions
escalated between indigenous Tutsi (Watusi or Tusi), along with other
ethnic groups, and Hutu (Hahutu) militia based in refugee camps bordering Rwanda
in eastern Zaire. These sprawling camps resulted from the exodus from Rwanda of
Hutu civilians after the 1994 genocide of Tutsi by Hutu troops. International
relief agencies maintained the camps, which extremist Hutu used as bases from
which to conduct raids into Rwanda, whose governmnet (formerly in Hutu hands)
was now led by former Tutsi rebel leader Paul Kagame (1957?-) in a coalition
with moderate Hutu leaders. After Hutu extremists convinced Zairian authorities
to expel all Tutsi from the country, Kagame, supported by Uganda's President
Yoweri Kaguta Museveni (1944-), gave Kabila command of some 2,000 Zairian Tutsi
recruits, who had recently been trained in Rwanda and who had already driven the
Hutu militia from the camps and seized much of eastern Zaire. Kabila now had
enough troops to mount a credible attack against Mobutu; by February 1997 he
controlled a corridor of land streching from Watsa in the north to Kalemie in
the south along the eastern border. With more support from Uganda, Burundi, and
Angola, Kabila's troops marched across Zaire, arriving near the capital
Kinshasa, in May 1997. Six months before, Mobutu had flown to Kinshasa from the
French Riviera, where he had one of his many lavish homes; at the time suffering
from prostrate cancer, he stayed but a few ineffectual days before flying back
to France. Later Mobutu returned to Kinshasa and was persuaded by his generals
and South Africa's President Nelson Mandela (1918-) to relinquish power; he then
flew to his hometown, Gbadolite, about 700 miles to the north. A day later the
rebel forces entered the capital without any fighting. Kabila's peaceful entry
and transition to power were engineered beforehand through negotiations among
Mandela, Mobutu, Kabila, and the US representative to the United Nations Bill
Richardson (1947-). Mobutu went into exile and later (September 7) died in
Rabat, Morocco. Kabila renamed the country the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
what it was called before becoming the Republic of Zaire in 1971; Kabila also
allowed only one political party -- his Alliance of Democratic Forces for the
liberation of the Congo -- despite pleas from other African leaders and the US
to include opposition members in his government.
|