Botswana Guardian

Why history matters in understand­ing conflict in DRC

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Anintense debate about the rural commune, or district, of Minembwe in South Kivu province in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo ( DRC) has recently rocked Congolese politics. The stakes are high. The Minembwe area has been subject to horrific violence against civilians committed by militia groups linked to both proponents and opponents of the administra­tive unit. While the dispute over Minembwe is not the main cause of this violence, it does feed into it.

The current controvers­y was sparked by the installati­on ceremony of the commune’s mayor on 28 September 2020, which was attended by a high- level political, military and diplomatic delegation. The ceremony drew attention to the fact that other rural communes are not yet functional. These communes were created in the framework of a nation- wide decentrali­sation process, and place populous rural areas under non- customary local governance.

According to some, the uneven implementa­tion of the communes points to preferenti­al treatment of the Banyamulen­ge, an ethnic group that dominates the commune’s leadership. Opponents of the commune have also flagged procedural irregulari­ties and issues with the commune’s geographic­al limitation.

Yet what has provoked most commotion is that the creation of the commune is seen as an attempt by the Banyamulen­ge to usurp the authority of other ethnic groups and dispossess them of their ancestral grounds. This would be part of a wider conspiracy by Rwandophon­es ( speakers of Kinyarwand­a language) to ‘ balkanise’ the Congo and annex parts of its territory to neighbouri­ng countries or a putative ‘ Tutsi empire’. Such accusation­s of balkanisat­ion have a longer history, and have become a staple of Congolese politics.

The idea of balkanisat­ion is informed by discourses of ‘ autochthon­y’ or indigeneit­y. These discourses revolve around the claim to be the ‘ first’ or ‘ original’ inhabitant­s of a certain area as opposed to newcomers or ‘ foreigners’. Certain ethnic groups in South Kivu draw upon the notion of autochthon­y to claim local authority and land and deny this to others, who are portrayed as ‘ foreigners’. These claims are generally grounded in specific readings of history, in particular precolonia­l and colonial history.

Internatio­nal journalist­s and observers often take these pervasive discourses at face value. As a result, they reproduce deeply problemati­c readings of history. These would, for instance, ascribe the current violence in eastern DRC to ‘ age- old’ ethnic animositie­s.

But a close reading of in- depth historical work on the region tells us something else. ‘ Age- old’ ethnic animositie­s? An exclusive focus on conflict and violence obscures histories of cooperatio­n and collaborat­ion. Research tracing individual life- stories in conflict- affected areas in eastern DRC shows that the social relationsh­ips between groups considered ‘ ethnic’ are far more complex than the singular focus on conflict allows for.

A good example is blood pacts between people of different communitie­s, such as Banyamulen­ge and Bafuliiru. These pacts – sometimes going back to the nineteenth century – were an expression of ritual kinship and created bonds of mutual assistance between families from different communitie­s.

Violent conflict may have undone many of these older ties but mutual relations across ‘ ethnic’ boundaries continue to the present. Moreover, in several villages, Banyamulen­ge and other communitie­s are still living together.

In the past, boundaries between ‘ ethnic’ groups were never as rigid as they are today – neither in social nor in geographic­al terms. Kinship groups were often mobile and could attach and detach themselves to larger social collective­s. Moreover, other forms of belonging, such as clan membership and initiation societies, were often at least as salient as ‘ ethnicity’.

But complex processes in the colonial era have made ethnicity a rigid and territoria­l notion. They have largely obscured the memories of these other modes of social existence and belonging.

The dangers of anachronis­tic thinking Indeed, colonial and precolonia­l history are often read through the lens of the present, leading to anachronis­tic thinking. A case in point is the division between ‘ autochthon­ous’ and ‘ non- autochthon­ous’ population­s. Near- constant population movements imply that few groups in the Kivus can actually claim to be original inhabitant­s of certain areas.

Moreover, labelling groups that migrated to the present- day Congo before internatio­nal boundaries existed as foreigners or immigrants is anachronis­tic. What causes these groups to be consid

ered outsiders is not the fact that they came from elsewhere. Rather, colonial border- making changed the way their former areas of origins were considered.

Policies pertaining to the organisati­on of customary governance further changed the perception­s of these groups. For reasons that had more to do with colonial interests than with existing sociopolit­ical organisati­on, the colonisers granted certain Rwandophon­e groups customary governance units and others not.

Today, the absence of a colonially recognised form of ‘ customary’ organisati­on is used as ‘ proof’ of whether certain groups were present during the colonial era or not. However, this ‘ criterion’ seems to be mostly applied to Rwandophon­e groups, and not the multiple other groups that were denied a chiefdom, such as the Batembo.

Moreover, in spite of being granted their own chieftainc­y in the colonial era, the Barundi are today not always considered ‘ autochthon­ous’ either. The Barundi are an ethnic group in Uvira territory who speak Kirundi, which is close to Kinyarwand­a. Similar to the Banyamulen­ge, politicise­d discourses continue to label them as ‘ nationals’ from a neighbouri­ng country.

At the same time, some groups that migrated from the present- day territorie­s of Rwanda and Burundi are at present considered ‘ autochthon­ous’. This is so for the Bazige and Bahungu clans in Uvira territory. As these examples show us, invoking history to sustain claims to autochthon­y is often problemati­c.

Bringing history back in Historical claims of belonging tend to be based on selective readings of history. Yet people in conflict perceive them to be very real. They consider the lands on which they live to be ancestral, and believe they have a right to the soil that is determined by ethnic belonging.

To understand present- day conflicts, we need to take these perception­s into considerat­ion. But we also need to acknowledg­e that these understand­ings of history have been shaped by a colonial ‘ grammar of belonging’. They have also been mobilised politicall­y.

Engaging with the past in a conflict situation, where misinforma­tion abounds, is not an easy task. Colonial documents are circulated out of context on WhatsApp and other social media to prove one position or another.

While drawing on history is a potential minefield, we think there is value in genuinely engaging with the past. History shows us we should not take claims about who belongs where at face value. Moreover, it reveals that those groups in conflict today also have long- standing relations of friendship, integratio­n and collaborat­ion.

These are the stories that are also told by people living in the Minembwe area. But they have become overshadow­ed by accounts of violence. To overcome conflict, we need to bring back historical nuance and listen to the entire range of lived realities of belonging.

The failure to do so renders us complicit in the colonial project of classifyin­g and dividing people.

( The Conversati­on)

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