Kabila Shooting Causes Confusion - Leadership Up For Grabs
AllAfrica.com
By Ofeibea Quist-Arcton
Accra
January 17, 2001
The Democratic Republic of Congo - and several other African countries
- have been thrown into a tailspin by news that the Congolese
leader, Laurent Désiré Kabila, was shot on Tuesday.
The news prompted total confusion and uncertainty, which continued
into Wednesday.
The authorities in Kinshasa had still not confirmed by early afternoon
on Wednesday, whether Kabila had survived or succumbed to the
bullets fired, apparently, by one of his personal guards.
Conflicting reports say the bodyguard fired at the president,
around lunchtime on Tuesday, after Kabila had a quarrel with senior
military officers at his presidential residence, known as Le Palais
de Marbre, the Marble Palace. More information trickled out piecemeal
through the evening and overnight.
The former colonial power, Belgium, was the first to announce
the death of Kabila on Tuesday evening, followed by Britain and
France on Wednesday morning. Kinshasa initially refused to confirm
or deny his death, saying nothing to the nation. Kabila,s cousin,
the Interior Minister Gaetan Kakudji, then announced on state
radio that the president had been shot.
Kakudji was reported to have said that the president had been
taken to hospital and had given him orders to impose a curfew
and close all land and river borders and the international airport
at Ndjili, outside the capital.
Later the official line changed. While Brussels, Paris and London
continued to report the death of Kabila at the hands of his bodyguard,
the Kinshasa authorities announced that Kabila was still alive
and had been flown 'abroad, (to Zimbabwe) for emergency treatment.
Zimbabwe is one of the six African nations that has been sucked
into the murky war at the heart of Africa, backing the Kabila
government. Angola and Namibia also sent military help to Kabila
to counter a well-armed and well-financed rebellion.
Uganda and Rwanda, formerly Kabila allies who helped him march
to Kinshasa and topple Mobutu Sese Seko in May 1997, are now his
arch-enemies. Both have been supporting an array of rebels in
the east and north of the Democratic Republic of Congo since 1998.
Reports from Harare confirmed that Kabila was being flown to Zimbabwe,
but a government spokesman said the Congolese president had died
on the way. Kinshasa was meanwhile still insisting that Kabila
was alive and that his son, Joseph, would be taking over the running
of the country in the interim. Most commentators conclude that
the government in Kinshasa has been desperately trying to buy
time and avoid a power vacuum.The implications of the departure
of the man, once hailed as a saviour of Congo and as swiftly scorned
a despot thereafter, from the political scene in central Africa
are staggering.
Kabila swept to power on a wave of elation, relief and optimism
in 1997, booting out Mobutu and earning himself the gratitude
of Zaire, as it then was, and the outside world. This product
of the cold war, a small-time guerrilla warrior and diamond smuggler-turned-rebel
leader, with his distinctive shaven football-shaped head and rotund
stature, had almost everyone at his feet for an historical moment.
But many years earlier, the Latin American revolutionary, Che
Guevara, who in the 'sixties trained dissidents in the eastern
Congo, is reported to have dismissed Kabila as a worthless womanizer
who would never make a guerrilla.
Kabila changed back the name of the country, the currency and
the river from Zaire to Congo and switched back to the old national
anthem - symbolic, surface reforms. But the new democratic style
of government that everyone had hoped for under Kabila never happened.
The Congolese leader had squandered local and international goodwill
within a year and fell out with his western allies and the regional
friends who had helped him march on Kinshasa.
As one analyst put it, there was a huge gap between expectation
and reality. Kabila condemned Mobutu for systematically robbing
his potentially rich country of all its wealth. Kabila,s detractors
accused him of continuing the trend and of abusing human rights
in a manner that paralleled Mobutu,s violations. As it became
clear that Kabila was not going to be malleable and cooperative
in Kinshasa and pay back their support, his onetime backers in
the region, Rwanda and Uganda, lost patience and switched their
allegiance to Kabila,s Congolese foes. His neighbours accused
Kabila of reneging on a deal to secure all Congo,s borders and
ensure that his territory would not be used by rebels from bordering
countries to launch attacks. An embattled Kabila was saved by
President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe who sent in back-up troops
and military hardware, helping the Congolese leader fight off
the rebels. Namibia also came to the rescue. Angola too took up
Kabila,s cause, as part of efforts to ensure the Angolan opposition
UNITA forces of Jonas Savimbi would no longer get help on the
Congolese side of the border.
In 1999, a peace accord was signed in Lusaka, Zambia by most of
those who mattered in the Congo conflict, barring some rebels.
But the deal was doomed and has remained in limbo, unimplemented.
Although the foreign troops in the Congo all agreed to withdraw
their forces, they have not done so and the rebels have continued
their march towards Kinshasa although they continue to find it
difficult to collaborate with each other, despite efforts by their
backers to broker a merger.
Zimbabwe may now do well to throw in its lot with the rebels.
Harare, and its military, are known to have sewn up lucrative
mineral and other deals with Kabila. Whether any new administration
in Congo will honour these is doubtful.
Angola will no doubt be strategically assessing how best to manage
a tricky and volatile situation without strengthening Unita. Namibia
may be relieved that it can pull out and calm criticism at home.
Rwanda and Uganda, the two allies who spectacularly quarreled
and fought out their dispute on Congolese soil, can choose two
routes. The neighbours can continue the nightmare of trying to
secure a military solution in Congo or harness the opportunity
of Kabila,s death to look for peace.
The rebels, especially Jean Paul Bemba who heads the MLC, Movement
for the Liberation of Congo may scent victory. Analysts believe
his forces could reach Kinsha, travelling by river, within a few
days and he may well decide that now is the time to strike and
try to wrest the capital - and the power - from a leadership much
weakened without Kabila.