Kuwait Times

Kinshasa recalls Kabila ‘liberation’

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Two decades after Kinshasa gave itself up willingly to rebel commander LaurentDes­ire Kabila, his son Joseph remains at the helm of this vast, conflict-ravaged nation although his rule is mired in political crisis. Back in 1997, the country then known as Zaire was struggling under the authoritar­ian rule of Joseph Mobutu Sese Seko, who seized power in 1965 and presided over a nepotistic regime steeped in corruption.

His rule came to an abrupt end in May that year when Kabila’s Alliance troops marched into the capital and the rebel chief declared himself president of the newly named Democratic Republic of Congo. “They were very young, dirty, starving and collapsing under the weight of their weapons,” recalls Chantal Kikalulu of the forces who entered Kinshasa on May 17, a city exhausted by decades of dictatorsh­ip. “Without thinking, we offered them food and drink.”

Backed by Uganda and Rwanda, Kabila’s Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo (ADFL) had begun their rebellion just seven months earlier, staging a rapid takeover which saw Mobutu flee and the rebels welcomed with open arms. “By dawn on May 17, 1997, excited residents of the city were running towards us with bread and water, and even buckets of water to wash ourselves with,” recalls Cedric ‘Zimbabwe’ Kabeya, who was just 16 when he served in Kabila’s army. During the campaign, the ADFL-which had liberally recruited children and teenagers as soldiers-appeared to be far better discipline­d than the rag-tag and generally unpaid Zairean Armed Forces (FAZ).

“Most of the cities fell into our hands without any resistance from Mobutu’s men who were demoralise­d and were just spewed out by the population,” recalls Major General Jean-Claude Kifwa, former head of Kabila’s guard. The people were happy to cooperate because they had simply “had enough of being humiliated, plundered and gratuitous­ly killed” by FAZ troops, says Kifwa, who is today in charge of defence for the southeaste­rn part of the country.

There was even disillusio­nment with Mobutu at the highest levels within the army, he adds, saying the rebels had access to “strategic informatio­n” which came from the general staff. According to a former senior FAZ officer, the last “real clashes with the enemy” took place at Kenge, 200 kilometres (120 miles) east of Kinshasa. After Kenge fell, there was “no real reason to defend Kinshasa, which would have resulted in a bloodbath” in a metropolis which was home to several million people.

By May 16, the ADFL was at the gates of the city and Mobutu fled to his hideout on the border with Central African Republic, dying in exile four months later. General Donatien Mahele Lieko, who was chief of staff at the time, decided to surrender without a fight-for which he was quickly assassinat­ed by Mobutu’s loyal presidenti­al guards. But history had already been written.

On May 17, ADFL forces entered Kinshasa alongside troops from Rwanda where they were welcomed by crowds hailing them as “liberators!” and shouting: “Kabila, we’re waiting for you!” At the time, Kabila enjoyed a particular­ly favourable internatio­nal context. As well as the backing of Rwanda and Uganda, the rebel chief also had the support of Angola and Burundi which were determined oust Mobutu at a time when the dictator’s Western support had dried up following the end of the Cold War.

But the enthusiasm over Kabila’s victory was short-lived-overtaken by the swift slide towards authoritar­ianism, subjugatio­n of the opposition and the troublesom­e presence of Ugandan and Rwandan soldiers on the streets.

“It was total disillusio­nment,” admits Adolphe Muzito, who served as prime minister under Joseph Kabila, the current president, from 2008 to 2012. — AFP

 ??  ?? KINSHASA: Congolese police patrol outside the main prison in Kinshasa, Congo, yesterday. Christian sect members stormeda prison in Congo’s capital yesterday, freeing the leader of their movement and 50 others, Congo’s justice minister said. Bundu dia...
KINSHASA: Congolese police patrol outside the main prison in Kinshasa, Congo, yesterday. Christian sect members stormeda prison in Congo’s capital yesterday, freeing the leader of their movement and 50 others, Congo’s justice minister said. Bundu dia...

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