The Star Early Edition

Angola loses patience with Kabila

Congolese president slammed

- REUTERS

ACHANGE of tone in Angola’s relationsh­ip with long-time ally Congo has left Congolese President Joseph Kabila more isolated as he clings to power in his vast central African country.

Angola, a regional political and military heavyweigh­t, has on several occasions provided vital support for Kabila, who took over as president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) in 2001 following the assassinat­ion of his father.

But Luanda is frustrated by Kabila’s handling of several crises, including his failure to step aside when his mandate ended last December and a conflict in which refugees have poured across his country’s long border into Angola.

In December Angola withdrew military trainers it had sent to the Congo, where wars at the turn of the century killed millions and sucked in neighbouri­ng countries.

That decision raised doubts that Luanda would be ready to bail Kabila out again, and those doubts have been heightened by the change of tone in ties, signalling a big shift in regional power politics.

Foreign Minister Georges Chikoti made it clear that patience was running out in May, when he questioned a statement in which Congo said a conflict in the Kasai region bordering Angola had been resolved after several months.

“On one side, we are told that the question of the succession of the kingdom of Kasai has been resolved, on the other, we (still) see people who arrive (in Angola) having been treated badly,” he told French broadcaste­r RFI.

Chikoti also backed calls for an internatio­nal inquiry into the killing of two UN investigat­ors in the region, a move which Kinshasa has rejected.

A more direct challenge has come from Sindika Dokolo, a Congolese businessma­n and art collector who is married to the billionair­e daughter of President Jose Eduardo dos Santos.

Having previously steered clear of national politics, Dokolo has in recent weeks hit out at Kabila on Twitter and in interviews, drawing comparison­s with the end of Congolese dictator Mobutu Sese Seko’s rule.

“We underestim­ate Congo’s capacity to destabilis­e the region,” he said. “We are playing with matches on a barrel of explosives and that worries me a lot.”

Dokolo has urged students and church leaders to mobilise against Kabila and praised Moise Katumbi, an opposition leader in exile.

He says he is commenting as a private Congolese citizen. But the outspoken remarks carry weight because they come from the heart of the family around Dos Santos.

“Clearly as husband to Isabel dos Santos, this signals frustratio­n in Luanda,” said Alex Vines, head of the Africa Programme at London-based policy institute Chatham House.

Congo, a country of more than 80 million people which is the world’s biggest cobalt producer, a copper and diamonds miner and oil producer, has been plagued by war and instabilit­y since the fall of kleptocrat Mobutu in 1997.

Angola has had difference­s in the past with Congo, including over their maritime border, competing claims to offshore oil and the expulsion by Luanda of tens of thousands of Congolese diamond miners more than a decade ago.

But Angola, whose population of about 26 million is much smaller than its neighbour’s, believes its interests are best served if Congo is stable, and has stepped in militarily or diplomatic­ally in the past to keep the status quo.

In 1998, early in a war that lasted until 2003, Angolan warplanes strafed Rwandan soldiers marching on Kinshasa. When gun battles erupted in the capital in 2006, Angolan troops flew in to help Kabila’s bodyguards defeat fighters loyal to Jean-Pierre Bemba, an ex-rebel he had just defeated in an election.

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? A vendor sits at a bus stand in front of a picture of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s President Joseph Kabila in Kinshasa.
PICTURE: REUTERS A vendor sits at a bus stand in front of a picture of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s President Joseph Kabila in Kinshasa.

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