The Zimbabwe Independent

DRC’s colonial legacy forged nexus between ethnicity, territory, conflict

- Kasper Hoffmann RESEARCHER

Throughout history, ethnic stereotype­s have been used to justify mass violence, exclusion, oppression, and inequality in many corners of the world. In times of violent upheaval and conflict, ethnic narratives often come to the fore. This is true even when the origin and the stakes have little to do with ethnicity. This colours people’s understand­ing of the conflict’s stakes and fault-lines.

In such moments, people may start to think of conflicts in ethnic terms. They may begin to attribute certain cultural, or genetic, characteri­stics of their adversarie­s as the cause for conflict. A perceived ethnic adversary may be regarded as “violent”, “aggressive”, “greedy, "savage”, “rebellious”, “restless”, “backwards”, “undemocrat­ic” or “cunning”. This makes it easier to cast them as a threat to one’s own ethnic community.

Such stereotype­s are not simply created on the spot by opportunis­tic leaders. Rather, they should be understood as identity categories embedded in society’s power structures, discourses, and, more broadly, in people’s ways of thinking and feeling. In brief, across the world people are socialised into thinking, feeling and acting as members of an ethnic community, or group.

Because ideas of ethnic territorie­s are a major source of political friction and persecutio­n in the world, it’s important to investigat­e how they are created and used in conflicts.

In a recent article, I dissected how ethnic territorie­s have been imagined and constructe­d historical­ly, and how they have been used in political struggles for power and resources in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

Formerly known as Zaire, DRC is the second largest country in Africa and home to 90 million people. A sizeable part of its rural population is administer­ed under no less than 250 traditiona­l chiefdoms. These are ruled by customary chiefs, who are recognised by the government and who apply both modern and customary laws. In addition to chiefdoms, there are myriad smaller customary units such as groupings and villages.

The focus of my study is the area directly west of Lake Kivu, known as Kalehe Territory, which has been the scene of violent conflict for more than two decades. The main conclusion I draw is that the ideas of ethnic territorie­s used by actors in struggles over power and resources in DRC have their roots in the way in which the territory was run under Belgian colonial rule.

This matters today because ethnicity still plays an important role in politics and violent conflicts in eastern DRC. Evoking ethnic narratives remains an effective strategy of mobilisati­on because of entrenched mutual distrust and prevailing fear. This is especially so in areas marked by persistent violent conflict such as Kalehe and Uvira further south.

Ethnicity, territory and conflict

A key component of how DRC — and other territorie­s across Sub-Saharan Africa — were run was the creation of chefferies or chiefdoms.

Chiefdoms were envisioned as mutually exclusive ethnically discrete territorie­s ruled by a single customary chief governing through customary law. The colonial authoritie­s used them to rule indigenous people indirectly as “tribes” or “races”, in their natural environmen­t, and through their own customs and political institutio­ns.

Across the world colonial regimes created “ethnic territorie­s”. By creating “ethnic territorie­s” they sought to balance demands for profit and self-financing with objectives of maintainin­g order, managing dispossess­ion, and upholding racial boundaries and hierarchie­s.

Hundreds of chiefdoms were created in DRC. The object was to ensure that order could be maintained at the same time as the indigenous population­s were turned into productive and taxable subjects. Customary chiefs with extensive powers became particular­ly important intermedia­ries. They were framed as the embodiment of traditiona­l indigenous political institutio­ns despite the enormous diversity of these.

However, the indigenous political units were not the pliable natural units imagined by the colonisers. Rather, they were complex polities populated by people with diverging interests and complex external relations. In eastern DRC, local leaders — such as the Bashi chief Kabare and the Banyungu prince Njiko — mounted rebellions against the colonial authoritie­s. As a result, violent repression became a common theme.

Over time, the territoria­l model fragmented. As a result, the creation of ethnic territorie­s became a dynamic process where boundaries were determined by political struggles. Violence, and the threat of violence, played a big role.

At the same time, theories of racial superiorit­y — of mixed biblical and scientific vintage — were harnessed to authorise colonial decisions to create ethnic territorie­s and impose paramount chiefs on previously independen­t polities.

Buhavu chiefdom

I focused on the creation of Buhavu chiefdom in the 1920s. It was made up of several hitherto independen­t indigenous polities. This brought together culturally diverse population­s into a single chiefdom under the rule of the Bahavu chief.

But several indigenous leaders and groups refused to recognise colonial overrule. These included rival Bahavu chiefs and leaders of the people collective­ly known as the Batembo.

The Batembo lived in small independen­t communitie­s on the eastern edge of the Congo River Basin. Among the Batembo, authority was dispersed among several clans and groups. This meant that the idea of a mono-ethnic territory ruled by a single chief was significan­tly at odds with the existing political culture.

These communitie­s and their leaders were forced into submission through severe repression, making the creation of the Buhavu chiefdom a violent act of exclusion and inclusion.

Its creation violated the area’s existing cultural diversity and political institutio­ns. It also silenced subaltern and rebellious voices, and concentrat­ed authority in the hands of indigenous royal élites willing to collaborat­e with the colonial authoritie­s.

Independen­ce from Belgium in 1960 created opportunit­ies for a new set of Congolese actors to shape politics.

In Buhavu chiefdom, a group of leaders, claiming to represent the Batembo ethnic group, demanded the right to territoria­l self-rule. They justified this demand on grounds that it was an economical­ly sustainabl­e and culturally homogeneou­s area. As such, they argued, it deserved to be recognised as a self-governing entity.

During the Congo Wars, the first in the mid-1990s and the second between 19982003 — the struggle to create a Batembo territory became engulfed in the larger dynamics of regional war.

Batembo leaders mobilised a powerful militia, which fought alongside Congolese government troops against Rwandan army units and their Congolese allies. This they justified on the grounds that DRC was threatened by a plan to forge a “Tutsi-Hima” empire in Central Africa sanctioned by the major western powers. Their new-found military strength also inspired Batembo leaders to push for the creation of their own ethnic territory called “Bunyakiri”.

But the politics that emerged after the second Congo War did not play out in their favour. Their soldiers either demobilise­d or became integrated in the Congolese army. And the group’s leaders were sidelined or outmanoeuv­red once they entered the arena of national politics. Today, Batembo leaders still clamour for the creation of an independen­t chiefdom.

Conclusion

The numerous conflicts in eastern DRC cannot be ascribed to ancient hatreds between ethnic communitie­s. There are many different causes of the complex conflicts in eastern DRC. Neverthele­ss, the idea of discrete and mutually exclusive ethnic territorie­s do play an important role in these conflicts.

This idea was introduced and institutio­nalised by the colonial administra­tion, and, in fact, violated the existing political institutio­ns and cultural diversity of eastern DRC. Hence, colonial ways of administer­ing indigenous population­s has played an important role in sowing the seeds of ethnic tensions in the present.

It seems logical, therefore, that a reconcilia­tion process in eastern Congo should entail a reckoning with colonial ways of thinking about ethnic territorie­s.

This will not be an easy task given the vested interests in the status quo. On the one hand, customary chiefs and political and military leaders derive much of their power from the idea of ethnic territorie­s. For many ordinary Congolese, on the other hand, chiefdoms provide both customary land rights and political inclusion since belonging to a chiefdom is a prerequisi­te for citizenshi­p. — The Conversati­on.

Hoffmann is Post-doctorate researcher, Department of Conflict and Developmen­t Studies, University of Copenhagen.

 ??  ?? Internally displaced persons gather for government briefing in South Kivu, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the scene of violent clashes between rival communitie­s since 2019.
Internally displaced persons gather for government briefing in South Kivu, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the scene of violent clashes between rival communitie­s since 2019.
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