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Marcel Lihau

Marcel Antoine Lihau or Ebua Libana la Molengo Lihau (29 September 1931 – 9 April 1999) was a Congolese jurist, law professor and politician who served as the inaugural First President of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Congo from 1968 until 1975, and was involved in the creation of two constitutions for the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Marcel Lihau
Lihau c. 1990
First President of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Democratic Republic of the Congo[a]
In office
23 November 1968 – June 1975
PresidentJoseph-Desiré Mobutu
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byBayona Bameya
Secretary of State for Justice of the Republic of the Congo
In office
9 February 1961 – 2 August 1961
PresidentJoseph Kasa-Vubu
Prime MinisterJoseph Iléo
Succeeded byPaul Bolya
Commissioner-General of Justice of the Republic of the Congo
In office
September 1960 – 9 February 1961
DeputyÉtienne Tshisekedi
Personal details
Born
Marcel Antoine Lihau

(1931-09-29)29 September 1931
Bumba, Équateur, Belgian Congo
Died9 April 1999(1999-04-09) (aged 67)
Boston, Massachusetts, US
Resting placeGombe, Kinshasa
Political party
  • MPR (1971–1975)
  • UDPS (1982–1993)
Spouse
(m. 1964)
Alma materCatholic University of Leuven

Lihau attended the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium with the help of sympathetic Jesuit educators, becoming one of the first Congolese to study law. While there he encouraged Congolese politicians to form an alliance that allowed them to secure the independence of the Congo from Belgium. He served briefly as a justice official and negotiator for the Congolese central government before being appointed to lead a commission to draft a permanent national constitution. He was made dean of law faculty at Lovanium University in 1963. The following year he helped deliver the Luluabourg Constitution to the Congolese, which was adopted by referendum.

In 1965, Joseph-Desiré Mobutu seized total control of the country and directed Lihau to produce a new constitution. Three years later Lihau was appointed First President of the new Supreme Court of Justice of the Congo. He retained the position, advocating for judicial independence, until 1975, when he refused to force a harsh sentence upon student protesters. Lihau was summarily removed from his post by Mobutu and placed under house arrest. Becoming increasingly opposed to the government, he helped found the reform-oriented Union pour la Démocratie et le Progrès Social. Mobutu responded by suspending his rights and banishing him to a rural village. His health in decline, Lihau sought refuge from political persecution in the United States in 1985, accepting a job as a professor of constitutional law at Harvard University. He continued to advocate for democracy in the Congo and returned to the country in 1990, to discuss political reform. He went back to the United States to seek medical treatment and died there in 1999.

Early life and education edit

 
Jesuit mission in Kisantu, where Lihau received some of his tertiary education

Marcel Lihau was born on 29 September 1931 in Bumba, Équateur Province, Belgian Congo,[1][2][b] the eldest of eight children.[2] After his secondary education at the Bolongo seminary,[1] he attended the Jesuit University Centre in Kisantu, graduating from the school's administrative sciences division. One of Lihau's teachers, sociologist Willy De Craemer, resolved to help him enroll in the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium, a school mostly unavailable to Congolese. To do this, De Craemer tutored him in Latin, Greek, and Flemish so he could take the Jury Central entrance exam. Lihau passed the test with a high score and was admitted to the university.[3] Since it was his goal to study law (not permitted to Congolese students at the time), De Craemer and several sympathetic Jesuit educators arranged for Lihau to take the necessary classes under the cover of studying Roman philology.[4] He also studied economics and philosophy.[1] For the duration of his studies he stayed with the family of a former director of Radio Léopoldville, Karel Theunissen.[5] Lihau served as president of the small Congolese-Ruanda-Urundi students' union in Belgium, Association Générale des Étudiants Congolais en Belgique[c] (AGEC).[1][6]

In 1958, a conference of Belgian missionaries was held to discuss expanding tertiary education in the Congo. As an invited speaker, Lihau encouraged Belgian clergy to join the side of Congolese activists and abandon what he referred to as an attitude of "clerical paternalism".[7] In 1962, after spending time in the Congo, Lihau returned to Louvain to complete his studies.[1] That year restrictions on Congolese education were loosened and Lihau became a Doctor of Philosophy law student.[8] By the following January, he had become one of the first Congolese to receive a law degree,[d] earning it with distinction.[4][11]

Career and political activities edit

Early activities edit

On the eve of the Belgo-Congolese Round Table Conference in Brussels in January 1960, Lihau advised the Congolese political delegations to form a "Front Commun".[e][1] They did, and the decision significantly strengthened their bargaining position with the Belgian government.[12] Lihau attended the political portion of the conference as an observer on behalf of the AGEC.[1] While there, he presented two papers compiled by the AGEC. The first, entitled "The Congo Before Independence", led the president of the conference to create one commission to discuss the future of the Congo's political institutions and another to address the upcoming elections. The second paper, entitled "The Internal Political Organisation of the Congo", compared the merits of Federalism and Unitarianism and proposed that the Congolese adopt one system or the other to ensure the future integrity of their country.[13] Before the conference dissolved, the Front Commun accepted the offer of the independence of the "Republic of the Congo" on 30 June 1960.[14] In April and May, Lihau participated in the conference that addressed the Congo's planned economic transition.[1]

Justice and judicial work edit

 
Lihau (centre left) with President Kasa-Vubu and the College of Commissioners

Shortly after independence, a widespread mutiny in the army and the secession of several provinces resulted in a domestic crisis.[8] In August Lihau met with a UN official in New York who encouraged him to disseminate support of a reconciliation between the central government and the authorities of the rebellious "State of Katanga".[15] President Joseph Kasa-Vubu dismissed Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba in September 1960 but the latter refused to leave his post, creating a political impasse. In response, Colonel Joseph-Desiré Mobutu launched a coup and displaced the parliamentary system.[8] On 20 September, he announced the formation of the "College of Commissioners-General", a government made up of university students and graduates.[16] Lihau was appointed Commissioner-General of Justice.[8][f] The college was dissolved on 9 February, and replaced by a new government under Prime Minister Joseph Iléo. Lihau was made Secretary of State for Justice.[20][21][g] During this time he frequently worked with Belgian advisers.[23]

Lihau traveled to Katanga in November 1960 to negotiate with the rebellious province's leaders.[1] He assisted in organising and subsequently took part in the Léopoldville Conference in January 1961 to discuss political compromise and reform.[24] He also participated in the Tananarive Conference in March and the following Coquilhatville Conference in April on behalf of Iléo to try and bring about a reconciliation among the dissident factions in the Congo. As result of the latter conference, Iléo created a commission to prepare a new constitution for the Congo and appointed Lihau to chair it.[1] Lihau played a key role in the drafting process from that point forward.[11] In June he joined Cyrille Adoula and Jean Bolikango in negotiating with the representatives of the Stanleyville government. Their meetings continued into July and resulted in the reconvening of Parliament and the Stanleyville government agreeing to disband.[25] On 2 August the Iléo Government was replaced by a new government under Adoula.[26] In January 1963, Lihau was hired to be professor and dean of the faculty of law at Lovanium University (later the National University of Zaire).[8] He encouraged his students to adopt a constitutionalist approach to law.[27]

On 27 November 1963, President Kasa-Vubu announced the formation of a new "Constitutional Commission".[28] The commission convened on 10 January 1964 in Luluabourg, with Lihau serving as its secretary. A draft was completed by 11 April, but its presentation to the public was delayed as Kasa-Vubu's government and the commission debated over which faction held the prerogative to make revisions. Kasa-Vubu eventually yielded and the constitution was submitted for ratification to the Congolese electorate at the end of June. The "Luluabourg Constitution", as it was known, was adopted with 80 percent approval.[29] On 26 July, Lihau was made a member of the Congolese section of the International Commission of Jurists.[30] In 1965, another period of government paralysis led Mobutu to seize total control of the country. He requested that Lihau draft a new constitution, which was adopted on 24 June 1967.[31]

On 14 August 1968, Lihau was named First President of the new Supreme Court of Justice of the Congo.[32] He was officially installed in the position on 23 November.[33] In his inaugural speech, Lihau requested "the scrupulous respect of all the authorities of the Republic the status of the magistracy guaranteeing independence in the exercise of its functions."[34] Two years later he became editor of the new law journal La Revue Congolaise de Droit and also served as general delegate to the Office Nationale de la Recherche et du Developpement[h] for its judicial, political, and social research division.[35] Marcel Lihau soon adopted the name Ebua Libana la Molengo Lihau, as per the encouraged Africanisation in accordance with Mobutu's policy of Authenticité.[36] As a judge, he believed that the term "law" applied "not only to legislative acts, but also to regulatory acts which are at least not illegal, as well as international treaties and ratified agreements".[37] In 1971, Lihau was inducted into the executive committee of the state-sanctioned party, Mouvement Populaire de la Révolution[i] (MPR). Three years later he was made a commissioner of its political bureau.[31] That year, a new constitution was promulgated that concentrated the government's authority in Mobutu as president. Lihau supported the independence of the judiciary and, despite Mobutu's centralisation, interpreted the document as only veiling such autonomy, not eliminating it. He explained that the constitution's references to the "Judicial Council" (a section of the MPR) in place of the previous term "Judicial Power" were, though obfuscating, done only for political reasons and signified no real change.[38] He surmised, "[T]he attributions of courts and tribunals have remained the same as in the past, even if the spirit in which they declare the law will necessarily be different." However, this interpretation ran contrary to Mobutu's ideals.[39] In June 1975, Lihau refused to enforce a harsh sentence levied against student protesters.[27] He was subsequently dismissed from the Supreme Court,[j] removed from his teaching position, and placed under house arrest.[31]

Opposition to Mobutu edit

 
Lihau joined opposition deputies in interrupting a government meeting at the Hotel InterContinental (pictured) in 1983.

In 1980, 13 members of Parliament published a letter criticising Mobutu's regime and were arrested for "aggravated treason". Lihau testified on their behalf during the ensuing trial.[40] Two years later he joined them in founding the Union pour la Démocratie et le Progrès Social[k] (UDPS) as an opposition party to Mobutu; Lihau soon became the new party's president.[8] Mobutu was particularly disturbed by Lihau's membership in the party since, as a native of Équateur Province, he added to the geographic diversity of the organisation and therefore its political clout.[41] In retaliation, Mobutu incarcerated him, suspended his rights, confiscated his personal property, and eventually banished him to the village of Yamake in Équateur Province.[8][31] In August 1983, Lihau joined several of his colleagues in attempting to interrupt a meeting between government officials and United States Congressmen at the Hotel InterContinental in Kinshasa while wearing Western suits and ties (then banned by Mobutu). A violent struggle between the UDPS members and Mobutu's security police ensued in full view of the American delegation and received a great amount of media attention in the United States.[41]

By 1985, Lihau's health had deteriorated and he was attempting to seek political asylum abroad. His application to Belgian authorities was refused.[41] Harvard University invited him to become a visiting scholar at its campus in the United States. David Heaps, chairman of the board of Human Rights Internet, convinced Mobutu to let Lihau leave the country.[42] He was subsequently granted political asylum in the United States, and moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts,[43] to become a professor of constitutional law at Harvard.[8] Meanwhile, in the Congo Mobutu persecuted the UDPS leadership, making it nearly impossible for Party President Étienne Tshisekedi to participate in political activities. In early 1988, a dozen party executives traveled to Boston and convinced Lihau to assume the presidency of the UDPS.[44][45] The following year Lihau founded a political conference with the goal of democratising the Congo.[43]

 
First meeting of the Union Sacrée de l'Opposition Radicale in Kinshasa in 1991. Lihau is seated in the first chair in the front row.

In April 1990, Mobutu announced he would accommodate multi-party politics. Lihau, who was at the time presiding over a meeting of exiled politicians in Brussels, demanded that before opposition elements returned to the country Mobutu's government guarantee the tolerance of a genuine multi-party system, agree to organise a round table conference for political reconciliation, and begin disbanding state security forces.[46] On 22 May, he visited the United States Department of State in Washington D.C..[47] Lihau returned to the Congo[41] and became one of four directors of the UDPS under a reformed leadership model.[45] The UDPS then entered a coalition with other opposition groups to form the Union Sacrée de l'Opposition, and he served on the union's ruling council.[48] He joined the UDPS in endorsing the formation of a "Conference Nationale Souveraine"[l] to discuss political reform in the country. One soon convened, but Lihau protested the large number of delegates summoned by Mobutu to participate, accusing him of trying to stack the representation in his own favor.[49] Throughout the conference's existence Lihau chaired its constitutional commission.[50] At one point during the conference, he denounced the perceived Baluba dominance of the UDPS and joined the Alliance des Bangala (ALIBA), a party with financial support from Mobutu that promoted politicians from Équateur.[51] Eventually the constitutional commission produced a draft recommendation of a federal system that was intended to maintain the national integrity of the Congo while respecting its diversity.[50] The conference disbanded in December 1992 having greatly reinvigorated democratic thought in the country but ultimately failing to enact significant institutional change.[52] Lihau went back to the United States to receive medical treatment.[1]

In June 1993, Lihau delivered a speech on television and radio, denouncing the Kasaian ethnic dominance of the UDPS and Tshisekedi's leadership. The UDPS then labeled him a "traitor" for his association with ALIBA and announced that it interpreted his statements as a resignation from the party. Kasaians close to Tshisekedi were incensed by Lihau's comments and considered assassinating him and fixing blame on Mobutu and Prime Minister Faustin Birindwa.[53]

Personal life and death edit

Like every man, Marcel Lihau made mistakes ... However, notwithstanding these moments of weakness, he maintained his lucidity not to undermine the healthiness of the party for which he had sacrificed long years among the most active of his life. We will always be grateful ... May this memory of gentleness, honesty and integrity left by Marcel Lihau endure forever!

—Statement by the UDPS leadership upon Lihau's death (translated from French)[27]

Lihau married future politician Sophie Kanza on 26 December 1964. They had six daughters: Elisabeth, Anne, Irene, Catherine, Rachel and Sophie.[2] The couple separated in the late 1970s,[1] and Lihau saw little of his family during his years in the United States.[43] In Lihau's later life a young politician named Jean-Pierre Kalokola claimed to be his illegitimate son. In response, Lihau successfully filed a lawsuit against him. After Lihau's death, Kalokola legally adopted his surname. Lihau's daughters denounced the action as a ploy by Kalokola to further his own political career.[54] In 2019, National Deputy Dismas Mangbengu declared that Kalokola was not Lihau's son, and Kalokola responded by threatening to sue Mangbengu. The Lihau family issued a statement requesting Mangbengu not to involve himself in a private family matter.[55]

Lihau died on 9 April 1999, in Boston, seven days after the death of his wife in Kinshasa. He was initially buried in a Boston cemetery before his body was exhumed and entombed in Gombe, Kinshasa, on 12 May.[8][56] Lihau's family never requested an autopsy. In 2001, Kalokola, ostensibly on behalf of the Lihau family, filed a complaint against unknown persons with the Attorney General of Kinshasa, claiming that Lihau had been murdered. He based his assertion on a strange visit that Lihau supposedly had with someone the day after the death of his wife and on unusual signs that were observed on Lihau's body when it was brought to Kinshasa.[56]

John Dickie and Alan Rake described Lihau as "reserved and rather uncommunicative" but in possession of an "excellent legal mind".[33] According to diplomat Jean-Claude N. Mbwankiem, he was "one of the best constitutionalists that the [Congo] has ever known".[57] In 2009, a ceremony was held in memory of Lihau in Kinshasa during which a courtroom was dedicated in his name.[58] Three of Lihau's and Kanza's daughters organised a mass of thanksgiving in their parents' honor in Gombe on 28 March 2015. Several prominent politicians attended the ceremony, including Léon Kengo wa Dondo and José Endundo Bononge.[59]

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ The country was renamed Zaire in 1971.
  2. ^ According to Michel Luka of the newspaper Le Phare, Lihau was born in Lisala.[2]
  3. ^ General Association of Congolese Students in Belgium
  4. ^ One Congolese mulatto, Victor Promontorio, began his legal studies in Brussels in 1930[9] and received his doctorate six years later.[10]
  5. ^ Common Front
  6. ^ According to the KongoTimes!, during his tenure Lihau was involved in Lumumba's death in January 1961.[17] Conversely, Pistone and Kashamura write that Lihau was opposed to killing Lumumba.[18] Hoskyns writes, "Though the authorities in Léopoldville certainly carried a moral responsibility for the [death], there is no reason to suppose that they ordered the [murder]. This is confirmed by the fact that the Commissariat of Justice went on preparing documents for Lumumba's trial till some time after his transfer, but a few days before the official announcement of his escape officials were ordered to close the files."[19]
  7. ^ Though not of ministerial rank, Lihau led the Ministry of Justice while serving in the Iléo Government.[22]
  8. ^ National Office of Research and Development
  9. ^ Popular Movement of the Revolution
  10. ^ The official dismissal order, which was cited in a press release, stated that Lihau was removed for contradicting President Mobutu and the ideals of the MPR.[34]
  11. ^ Union for Democracy and Social Progress
  12. ^ National Sovereign Conference

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l UDPS staff 1999, 1. Biographie.
  2. ^ a b c d Luka, Michel (27 March 2015). "Une messe de suffrages en mémoire de Marcel Lihau et Sophie N'Kanza". Le Phare (in French). Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  3. ^ Fox 2011, pp. 164–165.
  4. ^ a b Fox 2011, p. 164.
  5. ^ Kanza 1978, p. 11.
  6. ^ Emmerson 1968, p. 61.
  7. ^ Burke 2001, p. 45.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Samedi dernier au Sacré-Cœur de la Gombe: Pensée pieuse en mémoire de Marcel Lihau et Sophie Kanza" (in French). Groupe L'Avenir. 6 April 2015. Retrieved 15 December 2016.
  9. ^ Young & Turner 2013, p. 79.
  10. ^ Rideout, Wilson & Young 1969, p. 13.
  11. ^ a b Leibholz 1966, p. 656.
  12. ^ Hoskyns 1965, pp. 37–38.
  13. ^ UDPS staff 1999, 3. Contribution à la vie nationale.
  14. ^ Hoskyns 1965, p. 40.
  15. ^ Weissman 1974, pp. 87–88.
  16. ^ Hoskyns 1965, p. 239.
  17. ^ "RDC : TSHISEKEDI figure parmi les personnes ayant participées à l'arrestation et assassinat de LUMUMBA". KongoTimes! (in French). The Alamazani Group, Inc. 17 April 2015. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  18. ^ Pistone & Kashamura 1963, p. 276.
  19. ^ Hoskyns 1965, pp. 316–317.
  20. ^ (PDF). Moniteur Congolais (in French). Vol. 2, no. 5. Léopoldville: Government of the Republic of the Congo. 9 February 1961. p. 40. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 October 2017.
  21. ^ Hoskyns 1965, pp. 314–315.
  22. ^ Young 1965, pp. 346–347.
  23. ^ Munyengayi, Tshilombo (24 November 2005). . Le Potentiel (in French). Kinshasa. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 1 September 2017.
  24. ^ Area Handbook 1962, p. 368.
  25. ^ Higgins 1980, pp. 421–423.
  26. ^ Hoskyns 1965, pp. 377–379.
  27. ^ a b c UDPS staff 1999, 5. Testament politique en guise de conclusion.
  28. ^ Leibholz 1966, p. 657.
  29. ^ Leibholz 1966, p. 658.
  30. ^ Bakajika 2004, p. 140.
  31. ^ a b c d Fox 2011, p. 172.
  32. ^ (PDF). Moniteur Congolais (in French). Vol. 9, no. 16. Kinshasa: Government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. 14 August 1968. p. 1406. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 October 2017.
  33. ^ a b Dickie & Rake 1973, p. 572.
  34. ^ a b Mobe 2012, du «Guide» Sese Seko au «Raïs» Kabila ... asservir la magistrature.
  35. ^ Africana Library Journal staff 1970, p. 3.
  36. ^ CRISP staff 1972, p. 23.
  37. ^ Kazadi Mpiana 2013, p. 191.
  38. ^ Mutua & Rosenblum 1990, p. 38.
  39. ^ Mutua & Rosenblum 1990, pp. 38–39.
  40. ^ Clark & Gardinier 1997, p. 254.
  41. ^ a b c d UDPS staff 1999, 2. Contribution au combat de l'UDPS.
  42. ^ Wiseberg 1991, p. 539.
  43. ^ a b c Fox 2011, p. 173.
  44. ^ UDPS leaders 2015, p. 6.
  45. ^ a b Mulongo, Freddy (22 September 2017). "10 Questions à Julien Ciakudia, patriarche de la résistance congolaise !". Mediapart (in French). Paris: Société Editrice de Mediapart. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  46. ^ M'Pereng Djeri 2004, p. 108.
  47. ^ Country Report 1990, p. 11.
  48. ^ Kiley, Sam (1 November 1991). "Zaire opposition confronts Mobutu". The Times.
  49. ^ M'Pereng Djeri 2004, p. 225.
  50. ^ a b UDPS staff 1999, 4. Contribution à la CNS.
  51. ^ M'Pereng Djeri 2004, p. 227.
  52. ^ Nzongola-Ntalaja 2004, pp. 9, 11.
  53. ^ African journal of social communication staff 1997, p. 144.
  54. ^ . Digital Congo (in French). Kinshasa: Multimedia Congo s.p.r.l. 17 October 2011. Archived from the original on 24 March 2017. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
  55. ^ Tshahe, Roberto (31 December 2019). "DRC: National MP Jean-Pierre Lihau files a complaint against Dismas Mangbengu". L'Interview.cd. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  56. ^ a b Kandolo, M. (30 April 2001). . Digital Congo (in French). Kinshasa: Multimedia Congo s.p.r.l. Archived from the original on 7 April 2017. Retrieved 6 April 2017.
  57. ^ Mbwankiem 2014, p. 85.
  58. ^ "Hommage de la Cour suprême de justice à Marcel Lihau" (in French). Fédération des Congolais de l'Etranger. 11 August 2009. Retrieved 8 April 2017.
  59. ^ Enyimo, Martin (31 March 2015). "Hommage: une messe d'action de grâces en mémoire de Marcel Lihau et Sophie N'Kanza" (in French). Agence d'information d'afrique centrale. Retrieved 12 February 2017.

References edit

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  • Young, Crawford; Turner, Thomas Edwin (2013). The Rise and Decline of the Zairian State (illustrated, reprint ed.). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-10113-8.

marcel, lihau, marcel, antoine, lihau, ebua, libana, molengo, lihau, september, 1931, april, 1999, congolese, jurist, professor, politician, served, inaugural, first, president, supreme, court, justice, congo, from, 1968, until, 1975, involved, creation, const. Marcel Antoine Lihau or Ebua Libana la Molengo Lihau 29 September 1931 9 April 1999 was a Congolese jurist law professor and politician who served as the inaugural First President of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Congo from 1968 until 1975 and was involved in the creation of two constitutions for the Democratic Republic of the Congo Marcel LihauLihau c 1990First President of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Democratic Republic of the Congo a In office 23 November 1968 June 1975PresidentJoseph Desire MobutuPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byBayona BameyaSecretary of State for Justice of the Republic of the CongoIn office 9 February 1961 2 August 1961PresidentJoseph Kasa VubuPrime MinisterJoseph IleoSucceeded byPaul BolyaCommissioner General of Justice of the Republic of the CongoIn office September 1960 9 February 1961DeputyEtienne TshisekediPersonal detailsBornMarcel Antoine Lihau 1931 09 29 29 September 1931Bumba Equateur Belgian CongoDied9 April 1999 1999 04 09 aged 67 Boston Massachusetts USResting placeGombe KinshasaPolitical partyMPR 1971 1975 UDPS 1982 1993 SpouseSophie Kanza m 1964 wbr Alma materCatholic University of LeuvenLihau attended the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium with the help of sympathetic Jesuit educators becoming one of the first Congolese to study law While there he encouraged Congolese politicians to form an alliance that allowed them to secure the independence of the Congo from Belgium He served briefly as a justice official and negotiator for the Congolese central government before being appointed to lead a commission to draft a permanent national constitution He was made dean of law faculty at Lovanium University in 1963 The following year he helped deliver the Luluabourg Constitution to the Congolese which was adopted by referendum In 1965 Joseph Desire Mobutu seized total control of the country and directed Lihau to produce a new constitution Three years later Lihau was appointed First President of the new Supreme Court of Justice of the Congo He retained the position advocating for judicial independence until 1975 when he refused to force a harsh sentence upon student protesters Lihau was summarily removed from his post by Mobutu and placed under house arrest Becoming increasingly opposed to the government he helped found the reform oriented Union pour la Democratie et le Progres Social Mobutu responded by suspending his rights and banishing him to a rural village His health in decline Lihau sought refuge from political persecution in the United States in 1985 accepting a job as a professor of constitutional law at Harvard University He continued to advocate for democracy in the Congo and returned to the country in 1990 to discuss political reform He went back to the United States to seek medical treatment and died there in 1999 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career and political activities 2 1 Early activities 2 2 Justice and judicial work 2 3 Opposition to Mobutu 3 Personal life and death 4 Explanatory notes 5 Citations 6 ReferencesEarly life and education edit nbsp Jesuit mission in Kisantu where Lihau received some of his tertiary educationMarcel Lihau was born on 29 September 1931 in Bumba Equateur Province Belgian Congo 1 2 b the eldest of eight children 2 After his secondary education at the Bolongo seminary 1 he attended the Jesuit University Centre in Kisantu graduating from the school s administrative sciences division One of Lihau s teachers sociologist Willy De Craemer resolved to help him enroll in the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium a school mostly unavailable to Congolese To do this De Craemer tutored him in Latin Greek and Flemish so he could take the Jury Central entrance exam Lihau passed the test with a high score and was admitted to the university 3 Since it was his goal to study law not permitted to Congolese students at the time De Craemer and several sympathetic Jesuit educators arranged for Lihau to take the necessary classes under the cover of studying Roman philology 4 He also studied economics and philosophy 1 For the duration of his studies he stayed with the family of a former director of Radio Leopoldville Karel Theunissen 5 Lihau served as president of the small Congolese Ruanda Urundi students union in Belgium Association Generale des Etudiants Congolais en Belgique c AGEC 1 6 In 1958 a conference of Belgian missionaries was held to discuss expanding tertiary education in the Congo As an invited speaker Lihau encouraged Belgian clergy to join the side of Congolese activists and abandon what he referred to as an attitude of clerical paternalism 7 In 1962 after spending time in the Congo Lihau returned to Louvain to complete his studies 1 That year restrictions on Congolese education were loosened and Lihau became a Doctor of Philosophy law student 8 By the following January he had become one of the first Congolese to receive a law degree d earning it with distinction 4 11 Career and political activities editEarly activities edit On the eve of the Belgo Congolese Round Table Conference in Brussels in January 1960 Lihau advised the Congolese political delegations to form a Front Commun e 1 They did and the decision significantly strengthened their bargaining position with the Belgian government 12 Lihau attended the political portion of the conference as an observer on behalf of the AGEC 1 While there he presented two papers compiled by the AGEC The first entitled The Congo Before Independence led the president of the conference to create one commission to discuss the future of the Congo s political institutions and another to address the upcoming elections The second paper entitled The Internal Political Organisation of the Congo compared the merits of Federalism and Unitarianism and proposed that the Congolese adopt one system or the other to ensure the future integrity of their country 13 Before the conference dissolved the Front Commun accepted the offer of the independence of the Republic of the Congo on 30 June 1960 14 In April and May Lihau participated in the conference that addressed the Congo s planned economic transition 1 Justice and judicial work edit nbsp Lihau centre left with President Kasa Vubu and the College of CommissionersShortly after independence a widespread mutiny in the army and the secession of several provinces resulted in a domestic crisis 8 In August Lihau met with a UN official in New York who encouraged him to disseminate support of a reconciliation between the central government and the authorities of the rebellious State of Katanga 15 President Joseph Kasa Vubu dismissed Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba in September 1960 but the latter refused to leave his post creating a political impasse In response Colonel Joseph Desire Mobutu launched a coup and displaced the parliamentary system 8 On 20 September he announced the formation of the College of Commissioners General a government made up of university students and graduates 16 Lihau was appointed Commissioner General of Justice 8 f The college was dissolved on 9 February and replaced by a new government under Prime Minister Joseph Ileo Lihau was made Secretary of State for Justice 20 21 g During this time he frequently worked with Belgian advisers 23 Lihau traveled to Katanga in November 1960 to negotiate with the rebellious province s leaders 1 He assisted in organising and subsequently took part in the Leopoldville Conference in January 1961 to discuss political compromise and reform 24 He also participated in the Tananarive Conference in March and the following Coquilhatville Conference in April on behalf of Ileo to try and bring about a reconciliation among the dissident factions in the Congo As result of the latter conference Ileo created a commission to prepare a new constitution for the Congo and appointed Lihau to chair it 1 Lihau played a key role in the drafting process from that point forward 11 In June he joined Cyrille Adoula and Jean Bolikango in negotiating with the representatives of the Stanleyville government Their meetings continued into July and resulted in the reconvening of Parliament and the Stanleyville government agreeing to disband 25 On 2 August the Ileo Government was replaced by a new government under Adoula 26 In January 1963 Lihau was hired to be professor and dean of the faculty of law at Lovanium University later the National University of Zaire 8 He encouraged his students to adopt a constitutionalist approach to law 27 On 27 November 1963 President Kasa Vubu announced the formation of a new Constitutional Commission 28 The commission convened on 10 January 1964 in Luluabourg with Lihau serving as its secretary A draft was completed by 11 April but its presentation to the public was delayed as Kasa Vubu s government and the commission debated over which faction held the prerogative to make revisions Kasa Vubu eventually yielded and the constitution was submitted for ratification to the Congolese electorate at the end of June The Luluabourg Constitution as it was known was adopted with 80 percent approval 29 On 26 July Lihau was made a member of the Congolese section of the International Commission of Jurists 30 In 1965 another period of government paralysis led Mobutu to seize total control of the country He requested that Lihau draft a new constitution which was adopted on 24 June 1967 31 On 14 August 1968 Lihau was named First President of the new Supreme Court of Justice of the Congo 32 He was officially installed in the position on 23 November 33 In his inaugural speech Lihau requested the scrupulous respect of all the authorities of the Republic the status of the magistracy guaranteeing independence in the exercise of its functions 34 Two years later he became editor of the new law journal La Revue Congolaise de Droit and also served as general delegate to the Office Nationale de la Recherche et du Developpement h for its judicial political and social research division 35 Marcel Lihau soon adopted the name Ebua Libana la Molengo Lihau as per the encouraged Africanisation in accordance with Mobutu s policy of Authenticite 36 As a judge he believed that the term law applied not only to legislative acts but also to regulatory acts which are at least not illegal as well as international treaties and ratified agreements 37 In 1971 Lihau was inducted into the executive committee of the state sanctioned party Mouvement Populaire de la Revolution i MPR Three years later he was made a commissioner of its political bureau 31 That year a new constitution was promulgated that concentrated the government s authority in Mobutu as president Lihau supported the independence of the judiciary and despite Mobutu s centralisation interpreted the document as only veiling such autonomy not eliminating it He explained that the constitution s references to the Judicial Council a section of the MPR in place of the previous term Judicial Power were though obfuscating done only for political reasons and signified no real change 38 He surmised T he attributions of courts and tribunals have remained the same as in the past even if the spirit in which they declare the law will necessarily be different However this interpretation ran contrary to Mobutu s ideals 39 In June 1975 Lihau refused to enforce a harsh sentence levied against student protesters 27 He was subsequently dismissed from the Supreme Court j removed from his teaching position and placed under house arrest 31 Opposition to Mobutu edit nbsp Lihau joined opposition deputies in interrupting a government meeting at the Hotel InterContinental pictured in 1983 In 1980 13 members of Parliament published a letter criticising Mobutu s regime and were arrested for aggravated treason Lihau testified on their behalf during the ensuing trial 40 Two years later he joined them in founding the Union pour la Democratie et le Progres Social k UDPS as an opposition party to Mobutu Lihau soon became the new party s president 8 Mobutu was particularly disturbed by Lihau s membership in the party since as a native of Equateur Province he added to the geographic diversity of the organisation and therefore its political clout 41 In retaliation Mobutu incarcerated him suspended his rights confiscated his personal property and eventually banished him to the village of Yamake in Equateur Province 8 31 In August 1983 Lihau joined several of his colleagues in attempting to interrupt a meeting between government officials and United States Congressmen at the Hotel InterContinental in Kinshasa while wearing Western suits and ties then banned by Mobutu A violent struggle between the UDPS members and Mobutu s security police ensued in full view of the American delegation and received a great amount of media attention in the United States 41 By 1985 Lihau s health had deteriorated and he was attempting to seek political asylum abroad His application to Belgian authorities was refused 41 Harvard University invited him to become a visiting scholar at its campus in the United States David Heaps chairman of the board of Human Rights Internet convinced Mobutu to let Lihau leave the country 42 He was subsequently granted political asylum in the United States and moved to Cambridge Massachusetts 43 to become a professor of constitutional law at Harvard 8 Meanwhile in the Congo Mobutu persecuted the UDPS leadership making it nearly impossible for Party President Etienne Tshisekedi to participate in political activities In early 1988 a dozen party executives traveled to Boston and convinced Lihau to assume the presidency of the UDPS 44 45 The following year Lihau founded a political conference with the goal of democratising the Congo 43 nbsp First meeting of the Union Sacree de l Opposition Radicale in Kinshasa in 1991 Lihau is seated in the first chair in the front row In April 1990 Mobutu announced he would accommodate multi party politics Lihau who was at the time presiding over a meeting of exiled politicians in Brussels demanded that before opposition elements returned to the country Mobutu s government guarantee the tolerance of a genuine multi party system agree to organise a round table conference for political reconciliation and begin disbanding state security forces 46 On 22 May he visited the United States Department of State in Washington D C 47 Lihau returned to the Congo 41 and became one of four directors of the UDPS under a reformed leadership model 45 The UDPS then entered a coalition with other opposition groups to form the Union Sacree de l Opposition and he served on the union s ruling council 48 He joined the UDPS in endorsing the formation of a Conference Nationale Souveraine l to discuss political reform in the country One soon convened but Lihau protested the large number of delegates summoned by Mobutu to participate accusing him of trying to stack the representation in his own favor 49 Throughout the conference s existence Lihau chaired its constitutional commission 50 At one point during the conference he denounced the perceived Baluba dominance of the UDPS and joined the Alliance des Bangala ALIBA a party with financial support from Mobutu that promoted politicians from Equateur 51 Eventually the constitutional commission produced a draft recommendation of a federal system that was intended to maintain the national integrity of the Congo while respecting its diversity 50 The conference disbanded in December 1992 having greatly reinvigorated democratic thought in the country but ultimately failing to enact significant institutional change 52 Lihau went back to the United States to receive medical treatment 1 In June 1993 Lihau delivered a speech on television and radio denouncing the Kasaian ethnic dominance of the UDPS and Tshisekedi s leadership The UDPS then labeled him a traitor for his association with ALIBA and announced that it interpreted his statements as a resignation from the party Kasaians close to Tshisekedi were incensed by Lihau s comments and considered assassinating him and fixing blame on Mobutu and Prime Minister Faustin Birindwa 53 Personal life and death editLike every man Marcel Lihau made mistakes However notwithstanding these moments of weakness he maintained his lucidity not to undermine the healthiness of the party for which he had sacrificed long years among the most active of his life We will always be grateful May this memory of gentleness honesty and integrity left by Marcel Lihau endure forever Statement by the UDPS leadership upon Lihau s death translated from French 27 Lihau married future politician Sophie Kanza on 26 December 1964 They had six daughters Elisabeth Anne Irene Catherine Rachel and Sophie 2 The couple separated in the late 1970s 1 and Lihau saw little of his family during his years in the United States 43 In Lihau s later life a young politician named Jean Pierre Kalokola claimed to be his illegitimate son In response Lihau successfully filed a lawsuit against him After Lihau s death Kalokola legally adopted his surname Lihau s daughters denounced the action as a ploy by Kalokola to further his own political career 54 In 2019 National Deputy Dismas Mangbengu declared that Kalokola was not Lihau s son and Kalokola responded by threatening to sue Mangbengu The Lihau family issued a statement requesting Mangbengu not to involve himself in a private family matter 55 Lihau died on 9 April 1999 in Boston seven days after the death of his wife in Kinshasa He was initially buried in a Boston cemetery before his body was exhumed and entombed in Gombe Kinshasa on 12 May 8 56 Lihau s family never requested an autopsy In 2001 Kalokola ostensibly on behalf of the Lihau family filed a complaint against unknown persons with the Attorney General of Kinshasa claiming that Lihau had been murdered He based his assertion on a strange visit that Lihau supposedly had with someone the day after the death of his wife and on unusual signs that were observed on Lihau s body when it was brought to Kinshasa 56 John Dickie and Alan Rake described Lihau as reserved and rather uncommunicative but in possession of an excellent legal mind 33 According to diplomat Jean Claude N Mbwankiem he was one of the best constitutionalists that the Congo has ever known 57 In 2009 a ceremony was held in memory of Lihau in Kinshasa during which a courtroom was dedicated in his name 58 Three of Lihau s and Kanza s daughters organised a mass of thanksgiving in their parents honor in Gombe on 28 March 2015 Several prominent politicians attended the ceremony including Leon Kengo wa Dondo and Jose Endundo Bononge 59 Explanatory notes edit The country was renamed Zaire in 1971 According to Michel Luka of the newspaper Le Phare Lihau was born in Lisala 2 General Association of Congolese Students in Belgium One Congolese mulatto Victor Promontorio began his legal studies in Brussels in 1930 9 and received his doctorate six years later 10 Common Front According to the KongoTimes during his tenure Lihau was involved in Lumumba s death in January 1961 17 Conversely Pistone and Kashamura write that Lihau was opposed to killing Lumumba 18 Hoskyns writes Though the authorities in Leopoldville certainly carried a moral responsibility for the death there is no reason to suppose that they ordered the murder This is confirmed by the fact that the Commissariat of Justice went on preparing documents for Lumumba s trial till some time after his transfer but a few days before the official announcement of his escape officials were ordered to close the files 19 Though not of ministerial rank Lihau led the Ministry of Justice while serving in the Ileo Government 22 National Office of Research and Development Popular Movement of the Revolution The official dismissal order which was cited in a press release stated that Lihau was removed for contradicting President Mobutu and the ideals of the MPR 34 Union for Democracy and Social Progress National Sovereign ConferenceCitations edit a b c d e f g h i j k l UDPS staff 1999 1 Biographie a b c d Luka Michel 27 March 2015 Une messe de suffrages en memoire de Marcel Lihau et Sophie N Kanza Le Phare in French Retrieved 9 December 2016 Fox 2011 pp 164 165 a b Fox 2011 p 164 Kanza 1978 p 11 Emmerson 1968 p 61 Burke 2001 p 45 a b c d e f g h i Samedi dernier au Sacre Cœur de la Gombe Pensee pieuse en memoire de Marcel Lihau et Sophie Kanza in French Groupe L Avenir 6 April 2015 Retrieved 15 December 2016 Young amp Turner 2013 p 79 Rideout Wilson amp Young 1969 p 13 a b Leibholz 1966 p 656 Hoskyns 1965 pp 37 38 UDPS staff 1999 3 Contribution a la vie nationale Hoskyns 1965 p 40 Weissman 1974 pp 87 88 Hoskyns 1965 p 239 RDC TSHISEKEDI figure parmi les personnes ayant participees a l arrestation et assassinat de LUMUMBA KongoTimes in French The Alamazani Group Inc 17 April 2015 Retrieved 13 November 2017 Pistone amp Kashamura 1963 p 276 Hoskyns 1965 pp 316 317 Ordonnance no 10 du 9 fevrier 1961 nommant le gouvernement provisoire PDF Moniteur Congolais in French Vol 2 no 5 Leopoldville Government of the Republic of the Congo 9 February 1961 p 40 Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2017 Hoskyns 1965 pp 314 315 Young 1965 pp 346 347 Munyengayi Tshilombo 24 November 2005 Congo 24 Novembre 1965 C Etait Il Ya 45 Ans Le Potentiel in French Kinshasa Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 1 September 2017 Area Handbook 1962 p 368 Higgins 1980 pp 421 423 Hoskyns 1965 pp 377 379 a b c UDPS staff 1999 5 Testament politique en guise de conclusion Leibholz 1966 p 657 Leibholz 1966 p 658 Bakajika 2004 p 140 a b c d Fox 2011 p 172 Ordonnance d organisation Judiciaire no 68 325 du 14 aout 1968 PDF Moniteur Congolais in French Vol 9 no 16 Kinshasa Government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo 14 August 1968 p 1406 Archived from the original PDF on 23 October 2017 a b Dickie amp Rake 1973 p 572 a b Mobe 2012 du Guide Sese Seko au Rais Kabila asservir la magistrature Africana Library Journal staff 1970 p 3 CRISP staff 1972 p 23 Kazadi Mpiana 2013 p 191 Mutua amp Rosenblum 1990 p 38 Mutua amp Rosenblum 1990 pp 38 39 Clark amp Gardinier 1997 p 254 a b c d UDPS staff 1999 2 Contribution au combat de l UDPS Wiseberg 1991 p 539 a b c Fox 2011 p 173 UDPS leaders 2015 p 6 a b Mulongo Freddy 22 September 2017 10 Questions a Julien Ciakudia patriarche de la resistance congolaise Mediapart in French Paris Societe Editrice de Mediapart Retrieved 18 November 2017 M Pereng Djeri 2004 p 108 Country Report 1990 p 11 Kiley Sam 1 November 1991 Zaire opposition confronts Mobutu The Times M Pereng Djeri 2004 p 225 a b UDPS staff 1999 4 Contribution a la CNS M Pereng Djeri 2004 p 227 Nzongola Ntalaja 2004 pp 9 11 African journal of social communication staff 1997 p 144 Les orphelines Lihau plaident pour le respect de l heritage politique et culturel de leurs parents Digital Congo in French Kinshasa Multimedia Congo s p r l 17 October 2011 Archived from the original on 24 March 2017 Retrieved 23 March 2017 Tshahe Roberto 31 December 2019 DRC National MP Jean Pierre Lihau files a complaint against Dismas Mangbengu L Interview cd Retrieved 18 January 2020 a b Kandolo M 30 April 2001 La nouvelle affaire Lihau Digital Congo in French Kinshasa Multimedia Congo s p r l Archived from the original on 7 April 2017 Retrieved 6 April 2017 Mbwankiem 2014 p 85 Hommage de la Cour supreme de justice a Marcel Lihau in French Federation des Congolais de l Etranger 11 August 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2017 Enyimo Martin 31 March 2015 Hommage une messe d action de graces en memoire de Marcel Lihau et Sophie N Kanza in French Agence d information d afrique centrale Retrieved 12 February 2017 References editAfrican journal of social communication staff 1997 African journal of social communication in French and English vol 2 Kinshasa Facultes catholiques de Kinshasa Faculte des communications sociales OCLC 34988584 Africana Library Journal staff 1970 New Periodicals Africana Library Journal 1 2 New York Africana Publishing Company ISSN 0002 0303 Area Handbook for the Republic of the Congo Leopoldville Washington D C American University Foreign Areas Studies Division 1962 OCLC 1347356 Bakajika Thomas B 2004 Partis et societe civile du Congo Zaire la democratie en crise 1956 65 amp 1990 97 in French Paris L Harmattan ISBN 978 2 7475 7204 0 Burke Joan F 2001 These Catholic Sisters Are All Mamas Towards the Inculturation of the Sisterhood in Africa an Ethnographic Study Studies on Religion in Africa Vol 22 illustrated ed Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 11930 7 Clark John Frank Gardinier David E 1997 Political Reform in Francophone Africa Boulder Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 2785 3 Country Report Zaire Rwanda Burundi Country Report Analysis of Economic and Political Trends Every Quarter Zaire Rwanda Burundi London Economist Intelligence Unit 1990 ISSN 0269 5510 CRISP staff 1972 Deuxieme Partie Situation Actuelle de la Cooperation Technique Militaire C T M Etudes Africaines du CRISP in French 133 145 Brussels Centre de recherche et d information socio politiques Dickie John Rake Alan 1973 Who s Who in Africa The Political Military and Business Leaders of Africa London African Development ISBN 978 0 9502755 0 5 OCLC 901548477 Emmerson Donald K 1968 Students and Politics in Developing Nations New York Praeger OCLC 249703940 Fox Renee C 2011 In the Field A Sociologist s Journey New Brunswick Transaction Publishers ISBN 978 1 4128 4320 1 Higgins Rosalyn ed 1980 Africa United Nations Peacekeeping 1946 1967 Documents and Commentary Vol 3 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 218321 7 OCLC 219925805 Hoskyns Catherine 1965 The Congo Since Independence January 1960 December 1961 London Oxford University Press OCLC 414961 Kanza Thomas R 1978 The rise and fall of Patrice Lumumba conflict in the Congo illustrated ed London R Collings ISBN 978 0 86036 068 1 Kazadi Mpiana Joseph 2013 La Position du droit international dans l ordre juridique congolais et l application de ses normes l application de ses normes in French Paris Editions Publibook ISBN 978 2 342 00512 7 Leibholz Gerhard ed 1966 Constitutionalism and Constitutions in the Congo Jahrbuch des Offentlichen Rechts der Gegenwart Neue Folge Vol 15 Tubingen Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 3 16 615952 2 Mbwankiem Jean Claude N 2014 Vincent Robert Mbwankiem Le paradigme politique in French Paris Societe des Ecrivains ISBN 978 2 342 01972 8 Mobe Anicet 2012 l independance du judiciaire incompatible avec les cultures intellectuelles juridiques et politiques des congolais Congo Forum in French Archived from the original on 14 September 2017 Retrieved 13 September 2017 Mutua Makau wa Rosenblum Peter 1990 Zaire repression as policy a human rights report New York Lawyers Committee for Human Rights ISBN 978 0 934143 35 6 Nzongola Ntalaja Georges 2004 From Zaire to the Democratic Republic of the Congo revised ed Nordic Africa Institute ISBN 978 91 7106 538 4 M Pereng Djeri Jerry 23 October 2004 Presse et Histoire du Congo Kinshasa Le Discours de la Presse et son Role dans le Processus de Democratisation 1990 1995 PDF PhD thesis in French Universite de Cergy Pontoise Archived from the original PDF on 28 August 2017 Retrieved 13 September 2017 Pistone M R Kashamura Anicet 1963 Le Congo Recontres mediterraneenes in French Vol 12 Rome OCLC 38769419 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Rideout William M Wilson David N Young Crawford 1969 Survey of Education in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Washington D C American Council on Education Overseas Liaison Committee OCLC 654442566 UDPS leaders 31 July 2015 Declaration Politique de 25 Membres de L UDPS PDF Press release in French Brussels Union pour la Democratie et le Progres Social Archived from the original PDF on 12 September 2015 Retrieved 3 May 2017 UDPS staff 1999 In Memoriam Marcel Lihau 1931 1999 in French Union pour la Democratie et le Progres Social Archived from the original on 10 March 2000 Retrieved 25 July 2017 Weissman Stephen R 1974 American Foreign Policy in the Congo 1960 1964 Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 0812 0 Wiseberg Laurie S November 1991 Protecting Human Rights Activists and NGOs What More Can Be Done Human Rights Quarterly 13 4 525 544 doi 10 2307 762305 JSTOR 762305 Young Crawford 1965 Politics in the Congo Decolonization and Independence Princeton Princeton University Press OCLC 307971 Young Crawford Turner Thomas Edwin 2013 The Rise and Decline of the Zairian State illustrated reprint ed Madison University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 10113 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marcel Lihau amp oldid 1179857514, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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