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Moïse Tshombe

Moïse Kapenda Tshombe (sometimes written Tshombé) (10 November 1919 – 29 June 1969) was a Congolese businessman and politician. He served as the president of the secessionist State of Katanga from 1960 to 1963 and as prime minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo from 1964 to 1965.

Moïse Tshombe
Tshombe in France, 1963
5th Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
In office
10 July 1964 – 13 October 1965
PresidentJoseph Kasa-Vubu
Preceded byCyrille Adoula
Succeeded byÉvariste Kimba
President of Katanga
In office
11 July 1960 – 21 January 1963
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Personal details
Born10 November 1919
Musumba, Belgian Congo
Died29 June 1969(1969-06-29) (aged 49)
El Biar, Algiers, Algeria
Political partyCONAKAT
CONACO

Early life

A member of the Lunda ethnic group, Tshombe was born near Musumba, Belgian Congo, the son of a successful businessman. The Tshombe family were Lunda royalty and a number of Tshombes had reigned as the Mwaant Yav, the traditional king of the Lunda people.[1] He received his education from an American missionary school and later trained as an accountant. In the 1950s, he took over a chain of stores in Katanga Province, which failed.[2] Tshombe ran a number of businesses, which all failed, requiring his wealthy family to bail him out.[2] Tshombe later became involved in politics.[2]

Katanga was different from the other provinces of the Belgian Congo, being rich in copper, tin and uranium, all of which were mined by the Union Minière company.[2] The wealth generated by its minerals led to 32,000 Belgians settling in Katanga by the 1950s, which had more white settlers than any other province of the Belgian Congo.[2] The mining industry provided, by the standards of Africa, well paying jobs, and as such Katanga province attracted "immigrants" from the other provinces of the Belgian Congo.[3]

Tshombe, like many members of the Lunda royalty, was close to the settler elite, and felt threatened by the flood of Kasai Baluba moving into Katanga.[4] In the late 1950s, the Belgians allowed a limited degree of democracy in the Belgian Congo and in the first municipal elections in 1957, the majority of the mayors elected were Baluba, which sparked fears that the Lunda would be a marginalized group in their own province.[4] Tshombe's political involvement started in 1957 in response to the perceived threat of Baluba domination.[4]

Political career

Along with Godefroid Munongo, he founded the Confédération des associations tribales du Katanga (CONAKAT) party. CONAKAT promoted a federal Congo independent of the Belgian colonial empire.[5] CONAKAT was founded in October 1958 to address the perceived problems of "immigration" into Katanga from the other provinces of the Belgian Congo, and its platform called for upholding the rights of the "indigenous" peoples of Katanga by ending the "immigration".[4] The majority of the CONAKAT supporters were Lunda, Batabwa, Tshowke and Bayeke, most of whom lived in southern Katanga.[4]

In common with the other members of the Lunda elite, the aristocratic Tshombe looked back nostalgically to the Kingdom of Lunda that once covered much of northern Angola, the southern Belgian Congo and Northern Rhodesia (modern Zambia) in the 17th and 18th centuries.[6] CONAKAT formed an electoral alliance with the Union Katangaise party that represented the white Belgian settlers of Katanga.[6] Both CONAKAT and the Union Katangaise wanted very broad autonomy for Katanga within an independent Congo in order to keep the wealth generated by the mining industry within Katanga.[6] In contrast to CONAKAT with its calls for autonomy and curbs on "immigration", the "immigrants" in Katanga tended to favor the parties that called for a more centralized state.

President of Katanga

 
Tshombe at the Belgo-Congolese Round Table Conference, 1960

CONAKAT won control of the Katanga provincial legislature in the May 1960 general elections. One month later, the Congo became an independent republic. Tshombe became President of the autonomous province of Katanga.[7] Patrice Lumumba was tasked with forming a national government. Members of his party, the Mouvement National Congolais, were given charge of the portfolios of national defence and interior, despite Tshombe's objections.[8] The portfolio for economic affairs was awarded to a CONAKAT member, but this was undercut by the positioning of nationalists in control of the Ministry and Secretariat for Economic Coordination. Mines and land affairs were placed under separate portfolios. Tshombe declared that this diluting of CONAKAT's influence rendered his agreement to support the government "null and void".[9]

On the evening of 11 July, Tshombe, accusing the central government of communist leanings and dictatorial rule, announced that Katanga was seceding from the Congo.[10] Tshombe had the full support of both Belgium and the Union Minière in proclaiming Katanga independent.[11] One American diplomat described Katanga as a sham, reporting to Washington that the State of Katanga was "designed mainly for the protection of European lives and property".[11] Favoring continued ties with Belgium, Tshombe asked the Belgian government to send military officers to recruit and train a Katangese army. Tshombe's Belgian military adviser, Major Guy Weber, on 13 July 1960 appointed Major Jean-Marie Crèvecouer to train an army for Katanga.[12]

To disguise its lack of a military, the force being raised and trained was called the Katangese gendarmerie, but the name was highly misleading as the gendarmerie was in fact an army.[13] The majority of the officers training the gendarmerie were Belgian.[13] The Belgian historian Jules Gérard-Libois wrote: "During the entire month of August, a veritable race against the clock took place with the objective, for Tshombe and his advisers, of building a more or less efficient gendarmery before the eventual withdraw of the Belgian troops".[13] Tshombe engaged in a successful bluff in the summer of 1960 as he maintained that Katanga had the military forces to repel an invasion while an army was being raised.[13]

 
Tshombe in Katanga, 1962

Tshombe demanded United Nations recognition for independent Katanga, and he announced that any intervention by UN troops would be met with force.[14] Nonetheless, Congolese Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba and his successor, Cyrille Adoula, successfully requested intervention from UN forces. UN forces were sent under the direction of UN Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld.

The British diplomat Brian Urquhart, who met Tshombe several times, wrote: "Tshombe was not stupid, but he desperately wanted to be liked and recognized. He tended to agree with the last person he had talked to and could be counted on to go back on any agreement as soon as he had seen his next visitor. He was also an accomplished hypochondriac, using feigned ill health to avoid answering awkward questions. “J’ai mal à la gorge, Monsieur Urquhart” ("I have a sore throat, Mr. Urquhart"), he would suddenly whisper. "Je dois prendre immédiatement une piqûre" ("I must immediately get a [medical] shot.") And that would be the end of the conversation. Tshombe was basically a weak person who was always being manipulated by others-the Union Minière, right-wing politicians in Europe and the United States, mercenaries, arms dealers and other adventurers who were after his money."[15]

France, wishing to take advantage of Katangese minerals, sent to Tshombe the reinforcement of the mercenary Bob Denard and his men. It was supported by the networks of Jacques Foccart, the "Mr. Africa" of the French government.[16]

Lumumba's government was dissolved, and Lumumba taken prisoner by Mobutu and detained at Camp Hardy in Thysville. Harold Charles d'Aspremont Lynden (Belgian minister for African Affairs) sent a highly confidential telegram on 16 January 1961 to the government in Léopoldville (President Joseph Kasa-Vubu and Mobutu) to send Lumumba to Katanga. That would have stemmed from Lumumba's increasing popularity among soldiers, who might release him. Meanwhile, soldier mutinies and unrest increased by the day, at Prison Camp Hardy in Thysville. The telegram has still not been shown to exist.

Whilst being flown in a Sabena Douglas DC-4 plane to Katanga, Lumumba was beaten by the Congolese soldiers escorting him. In custody in Katanga, Lumumba was visited by Katangese notables and Belgian officers, who included Tshombe, Godefroid Munongo, Kibwe, Kitenge, Grandelet, Son, Gat, Huyghé, Tignée, Verscheure, Segers and Rougefort. Lumumba's execution, on 17 January, was carried out by a firing squad led by a Belgian mercenary, Julien Gat.[17]

In September 1961, the United Nations launched Operation Morthor with the aim of reintegrating Katanga into the Congo, causing Tshombe to flee into Northern Rhodesia for a time.[18] However, the Katangese gendarmerie proved to be tougher than expected and in the siege of Jadotville, Irish troops serving under the United Nations flag were forced to surrender.[18] The United Nations secretary-general, Dag Hammarskjöld, flew to meet Tshombe to discuss a ceasefire.[18] After the meeting, Hammarskjöld, was killed in an airplane crash.[18]

Tshombe become an iconic figure for American conservatives in the 1960s who saw him as an acceptable African leader.[19] The American historian Kyle Burke wrote: "To them [American conservatives], Tshombe represented a comfortable kind of decolonization, in which elite Africans would manage the transition from colony to nation without altering the existing racial, political and economic order, thereby ensuring that communists would not gain a foothold in these countries".[20] American conservatives presented the Belgian Congo as a place of racial harmony, which Tshombe had tried to preserve.[21]

The principal lobbying group for Tshombe was the American Committee for Aid to Katangan Freedom Fighters that portrayed the United Nations as a communist-dominated organization that was seeking to crush Katanga to achieve Soviet foreign policy goals in Africa.[11] The support for Tshombe was at least in part related to American domestic politics as the Kennedy administration supported the United Nations against Katanga and the support for Tshombe in the United States came mostly from conservative Republicans and Democrats, who used Kennedy's opposition to Tshombe to argue that he was "soft on communism".[11] By contrast, Afro-Americans loathed Tshombe, seeing him as an "Uncle Tom" figure, a black man who was submissive and docile towards whites.[22]

Prime Minister of the Congo

 
Prime Minister Tshombe touring Stanleyville in 1964

In 1963, UN forces succeeded in suppressing Katanga, driving Tshombe into exile in Northern Rhodesia and then Spain. Tshombe took 890 suitcases full of one million gold pieces with him into exile, which he placed into various European banks, allowing him to live in comfort and luxury.[23] At the same time, the UN forces found that the Katangese treasury had been stripped bare. The entire vault contained only £10 British pounds together with one dead rat.[23]

In early 1964, the Simba rebellion broke out and the Congolese government rapidly lost control of the entire eastern half of the Congo. At the same time, Tshombe started to correspond with several of his former enemies such as the justice minister, Justin-Marie Bomboko; the police chief, Victor Nendaka; and most importantly, the commander of the army, General Joseph-Désiré Mobutu.[23]

As the Armée Nationale Congolaise could not handle the Simbas, Mobutu argued that the Congo needed Western help.[24] Mobutu had been the king-maker of Conglese politics ever since he staged his first coup in 1960. He pressured President Joseph Kasa-Vubu to appoint Tshombe premier on the grounds that he was the Congolese politician most likely to secure Western support.[25]

Most of the economic concessions in the Belgian Congo were para-statal, as the Belgian state had invested its own funds alongside those of European capitalists in developing the concessions.[24] When Belgium granted independence to the Congo in 1960, the Belgians refused to transfer their shares in the concessions to the Congolese state under the grounds that the Congo refused to assume the debts that the Belgians had incurred when developing the concessions, which deprived the Congolese state of much needed revenue.[24]

In March 1964, the Belgian Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak visited Leopoldville and agreed to transfer the Belgian shares of the concessions.[24] During the same visit, Spaak seems to have made appointing Tshombe premier the precondition of the share transfer.[24] Finally, the administration of John F. Kennedy was very hostile towards Tshombe, but on 22 November 1963 Kennedy was assassinated. Kennedy's successor, Lyndon B. Johnson was more supportive of Tshombe, viewing him as a firmly pro-Western politician.[26]

In July 1964, he returned to the Congo to serve as prime minister in a new coalition government. His cabinet was sworn in on 10 July.[27] Tshombe's national support was derived from the backing of provincial political bosses, customary chiefs, and foreign financial interests.[28] Among his first acts in office were the lifting of a curfew in Léopoldville, the release of 600 political prisoners—including Antoine Gizenga, and the ordering of Katangese gendarmes to return from their exile in Angola to the Congo and join the national army.[27]

Tshombe had made extensive use of white mercenaries to fight for Katanga, and as the Congolese premier, he hired the same mercenaries to fight for the Congo.[24] The return of Tshombe to power was met with criticism. Malcolm X detested Tshombe as an "Uncle Tom", and in a 1964 speech in New York called him "the worse African ever born" and "the man who in cold blood, cold blood, committed an international crime-murdered Patrice Lumumba".[29]

In a New Year's message at the beginning of 1965, Tshombe rejected conciliation with the Simba rebels and called for their total defeat.[30] Tshombe formed the federalist Convention Nationale Congolaise (CONACO), a bloc of forty-nine parties for the 1965 general election. The party won comfortably gaining 38 seats with the alliance as a whole winning 122 seats. Despite this victory Tshombe was dismissed from his position as Prime Minister in October 1965 by President Kasa-Vubu and replaced by Évariste Kimba. In November, General Joseph Mobutu, who had just staged a successful coup against Kasa-Vubu, brought charges of treason against Tshombe, who again fled the country and settled in Francoist Spain.

Later life

In 1965, Tshombe's brother, Daniel, became the Mwaant Yav, which greatly added to his appeal in Katanga.[31] Traditionally, the title of Mwaant Yav alternated between different Lunda royal families, but since 1965 the office of Mwaant Yav has been held by members of the Tshombe family.[31] In 1967, Tshombe was sentenced to death in absentia.

On 30 June 1967, he was in a Hawker Siddeley jet aircraft that was hijacked by Francis Bodenan, an agent of the French SDECE. According to the Congolese government, Tshombe was travelling to Africa.[32] He was taken to Algeria, jailed, and placed under house arrest. At his trial, he was represented by French lawyer René Floriot.[33] The pilots of the plane, Britons Trevor Copleston and David Taylor, were released and returned to the United Kingdom. The Congolese government demanded his extradition to Congo and his Western supporters agitated for his release.[32]

The Algerians resisted both demands. A part of his supporters gathered to form the Tshombe Emergency Committee in the U.S., including Marvin Liebman and William F. Buckley, to press for his release and move to Spain.[19] The Tshombe Emergency Committee filed a number of legal challenges to force the Algerians to release Tshombe to no avail.[19] Long-time aide Michel Struelens travelled to different European cities to lobby for Tshombe, eventually to no avail.[34]

Death and legacy

Tshombe died in Algeria in 1969. The Algerian government called in eight Algerian physicians and three French doctors, who concluded that he died in his sleep. Later, an autopsy concluded a natural death.[35] Tshombe's nephew Joseph Kayomb Tshombe stipulated that no medical doctor chosen by the Tshombe family was admitted at the autopsy.[36]

Further doubts were raised regarding Tshombe's death by former governor of Katanga and political exile Daniel Monguya Mbenge, who accused French lawyer Jacques Vergès of poisoning Tshombe by order of Mobutu.[37] In the context of a series of interviews regarding a conspiracy theory about the assassination of US President John F. Kennedy, Belgian mercenary Joseph Smal told author Stephen J. Rivele that Tshombe was killed by two injections with two different substances, prepared by the CIA.[38]

Moïse Tshombe was buried in a Methodist service at Etterbeek Cemetery, near Brussels, Belgium.[39] Owing to his role in the death of Lumumba and his association with Western interests, Tshombe's name became synonymous with "sellout" to Black African nationalists.[40][41][a]

Tshombe's nephew, Jean Nguza Karl-i-Bond, later became an important politician and served as prime minister from 1980 to 1981.[43]

Portrayals

The plot of the 1978 war film The Wild Geese is based in part on speculation that Tshombe's plane had initially been diverted to Rhodesia before being sent to Algeria. The film's characters Colonel Allen Faulkner and President Julius Limbani were largely based on Tshombe and his military ally Maj. "Mad Mike" Hoare.[44]

Tshombe has been played twice by the French actor Pascal N'Zonzi, first in the 2000 film Lumumba and again in the 2011 film Mister Bob.[45][46] He was portrayed by Danny Sapani in the 2016 film The Siege of Jadotville.[47]

Honours

Notes

  1. ^ A derivative of Tshombe's name, chombe, was incorporated into the Shona language as a word for "sellout". Kuchomba is the verb form.[42]

References

  1. ^ Kennes & Larmer 2016, p. 32.
  2. ^ a b c d e Othen 2015, p. 10.
  3. ^ Larmer 2013, p. 162.
  4. ^ a b c d e Larmer 2013, p. 162-163.
  5. ^ Nzongola-Ntalaja, Georges (February 2002). The Congo from Leopold to Kabila: A People's History. Zed Books. ISBN 978-1-84277-053-5.
  6. ^ a b c Larmer 2013, p. 163.
  7. ^ "Congo (Kinshasa) provinces". www.rulers.org. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  8. ^ Hoskyns 1965, p. 79.
  9. ^ Gérard-Libois 1966, p. 85.
  10. ^ Hoskyns 1965, p. 99.
  11. ^ a b c d Burke 2018, p. 44.
  12. ^ Larmer 2013, p. 164.
  13. ^ a b c d Larmer 2013, p. 165.
  14. ^ "Katanga Premier Warns U.N. Force" (PDF). The New York Times. Reuters. 21 July 1960. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  15. ^ Urquhart, Brian (13 February 2019). "Character Sketches: Mobutu and Tshombe-Two Conoglese Rogues". United Nations. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  16. ^ Wauthier, Claude (2002). "Jacques Foccart et les mauvais conseils de Félix Houphouët-Boigny". Cahiers du Centre de recherches historiques (in French). 30. Retrieved 28 May 2021.
  17. ^ The Assassination of Lumumba, Ludo De Witte, 2003, ISBN 1-85984-410-3
  18. ^ a b c d Larmer 2013, p. 167.
  19. ^ a b c Burke 2018, p. 47.
  20. ^ Burke 2018, p. 47-48.
  21. ^ Burke 2018, p. 48.
  22. ^ Meriwether 2009, p. 224.
  23. ^ a b c Gonze 1964, p. 4.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Gonze 1964, p. 5.
  25. ^ Kennes & Larmer 2016, p. 69.
  26. ^ Gonze 1964, p. 4-5.
  27. ^ a b O'Ballance 1999, p. 70.
  28. ^ Semonin 1968, p. 20.
  29. ^ Tuck 2014, p. 155-156.
  30. ^ O'Ballance 1999, p. 85.
  31. ^ a b Kennes & Larmer 2016, p. 68.
  32. ^ a b Gibbs, David N. (1991). The Political Economy of Third World Intervention. University of Chicago Press. pp. 152, 167–168. ISBN 0-226-29071-9.
  33. ^ Floriot loses one, Time magazine, 28 July 1967.
  34. ^ Freiherr von Müllenheim-Rechberg, Burkard (1998). Entführung und Tod des Moïse Tshombe: Das Ende einer Hoffnung für den Kongo. LIT. pp. 72–73. ISBN 3-8258-3940-0.
  35. ^ "Algeria: End in Captivity". Time. 1969. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  36. ^ Kayomb Tshombe, Joseph (1997). Le rapt de Tshombe: La mise à mort du leader congolais. Brussels: Quorum. p. 102. ISBN 9782873990206.
  37. ^ Monguya Mbenge, Daniel (1977). Histoire secrète du Zaïre: L'autopsie de la barbarie au service du monde. Brussels: Editions de l’espérance. p. 127.
  38. ^ "Report by Steve Rivele on Second European trip, January, 1986" (PDF). p. 9.
  39. ^ "Tshombe is Buried in Brussels; Sons Weep at His Grave". The New York Times. UPI. 6 July 1969. p. 6. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  40. ^ Sibanda 2005, p. 116.
  41. ^ Fouéré 2015, p. 158.
  42. ^ Pekeshe, Munhamu (15 January 2015). "Tshombe, Geneva and détente in the village". The Patriot. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  43. ^ Akyeampong & Gates 2012, p. 299.
  44. ^ "Mercenary 'Mad Mike' Hoare dies aged 100," www.bbc.com, 3 February 2020. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
  45. ^ "Lumumba - Full Cast & Crew". TV Guide. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  46. ^ Marshall, Andrew (18 June 2021). "Mister Bob (2011)". Military Gogglebox. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  47. ^ Uhlich, Keith (6 October 2016). "'The Siege of Jadotville': TV Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  48. ^ Frankel, Benjamin (ed.), The Cold War, 1945-1991: Leaders and other important figures in the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, China, and the Third World, p. 339

Sources

  • Akyeampong, Emmanuel Kwaku; Gates, Henry Louis, Jr., eds. (2012). Dictionary of African Biography. Vol. 3. New York: Oxford University Press USA. ISBN 978-0-19-538207-5.
  • Burke, Kyle (2018). Revolutionaries for the Right Anticommunist Internationalism and Paramilitary Warfare in the Cold War. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9781469640747.
  • Fouéré, Marie-Aude, ed. (2015). Remembering Julius Nyerere in Tanzania: History, Memory, Legacy (illustrated, reprint ed.). Mkuki na Nyota Publishers. ISBN 9789987753260.
  • Gérard-Libois, Jules (1966). Katanga Secession (translated ed.). Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press. OCLC 477435.
  • Gonze, Colin (September 1964). "Tshombe in Wonderland". Africa Today. 11 (7): 4–6.
  • Hoskyns, Catherine (1965). The Congo Since Independence: January 1960 – December 1961. London: Oxford University Press. OCLC 414961.
  • Kanza, Thomas R. (1994). The Rise and Fall of Patrice Lumumba: Conflict in the Congo (expanded ed.). Rochester, VT: Schenkman Books, Inc. ISBN 0-87073-901-8.
  • Kennes, Erik; Larmer, Miles (2016). The Katangese Gendarmes and War in Central Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253021502.
  • Larmer, Miles (2013). "Of Local Identities and Transnational Conflict: The Katangese Gendarmes and Central-Southern Africa's Forty-Years War, 1960-1999". In Bruce Collins, Nir Arielli (ed.). Transnational Soldiers Foreign Military Enlistment in the Modern Era. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 160–180. ISBN 9780230319684.
  • Meriwether, James H. (2009). Proudly We Can Be Africans Black Americans and Africa, 1935-1961. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807860410.
  • O'Ballance, Edgar (1999). The Congo-Zaire Experience, 1960–98. Basingstoke, England: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-28648-1.
  • Othen, Christopher (2015). Katanga 1960-63: Mercenaries, Spies and the African Nation that Waged War on the World. Cheltenham: The History Press. ISBN 978-0750989169.
  • Semonin, Paul (January 1968). "Mobutu and the Congolese". The World Today. 24 (1): 20–29. JSTOR 40394031.
  • Sibanda, Eliakim M. (2005). The Zimbabwe African People's Union, 1961-87: A Political History of Insurgency in Southern Rhodesia (illustrated ed.). Africa World Press. ISBN 9781592212767.
  • Tuck, Stephen (2014). The Night Malcolm X Spoke at the Oxford Union A Transatlantic Story of Antiracist Protest. Los Angeles: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520279339.

Further reading

  • Colvin, Ian. The rise and fall of Moise Tshombe: A biography (Frewin, 1968).
  • De Witte, Ludo (2003). The Assassination of Lumumba. Verso. ISBN 1-85984-410-3.
  • Gibbs, David N. "Dag Hammarskjöld, the United Nations, and the Congo Crisis of 1960–1: a reinterpretation." Journal of Modern African Studies 31.1 (1993): 163-174. online
  • Kalb, Madeleine G. The Congo cables: the cold war in Africa--from Eisenhower to Kennedy (1982).
  • Mazrui, Ali A. "Moise Tshombe and the Arabs: 1960 to 1968." Race 10.3 (1969): 285-304.
  • O'Brien, Conor Cruise. "The UN, Congo and Tshombe." Transition 15 (1964): 29-31. online

External links

  • "Moise Kapend Tshombe". Find-A-Grave.
  • "Moise Tshombe" on YouTube
  • Archive Moïse Tshombe, Royal Museum for Central Africa
Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
10 July 1964 – 13 October 1965
Succeeded by

moïse, tshombe, moïse, kapenda, tshombe, sometimes, written, tshombé, november, 1919, june, 1969, congolese, businessman, politician, served, president, secessionist, state, katanga, from, 1960, 1963, prime, minister, democratic, republic, congo, from, 1964, 1. Moise Kapenda Tshombe sometimes written Tshombe 10 November 1919 29 June 1969 was a Congolese businessman and politician He served as the president of the secessionist State of Katanga from 1960 to 1963 and as prime minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo from 1964 to 1965 Moise TshombeTshombe in France 19635th Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of the CongoIn office 10 July 1964 13 October 1965PresidentJoseph Kasa VubuPreceded byCyrille AdoulaSucceeded byEvariste KimbaPresident of KatangaIn office 11 July 1960 21 January 1963Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byPosition abolishedPersonal detailsBorn10 November 1919Musumba Belgian CongoDied29 June 1969 1969 06 29 aged 49 El Biar Algiers AlgeriaPolitical partyCONAKATCONACO Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 2 1 President of Katanga 2 2 Prime Minister of the Congo 3 Later life 4 Death and legacy 5 Portrayals 6 Honours 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life EditA member of the Lunda ethnic group Tshombe was born near Musumba Belgian Congo the son of a successful businessman The Tshombe family were Lunda royalty and a number of Tshombes had reigned as the Mwaant Yav the traditional king of the Lunda people 1 He received his education from an American missionary school and later trained as an accountant In the 1950s he took over a chain of stores in Katanga Province which failed 2 Tshombe ran a number of businesses which all failed requiring his wealthy family to bail him out 2 Tshombe later became involved in politics 2 Katanga was different from the other provinces of the Belgian Congo being rich in copper tin and uranium all of which were mined by the Union Miniere company 2 The wealth generated by its minerals led to 32 000 Belgians settling in Katanga by the 1950s which had more white settlers than any other province of the Belgian Congo 2 The mining industry provided by the standards of Africa well paying jobs and as such Katanga province attracted immigrants from the other provinces of the Belgian Congo 3 Tshombe like many members of the Lunda royalty was close to the settler elite and felt threatened by the flood of Kasai Baluba moving into Katanga 4 In the late 1950s the Belgians allowed a limited degree of democracy in the Belgian Congo and in the first municipal elections in 1957 the majority of the mayors elected were Baluba which sparked fears that the Lunda would be a marginalized group in their own province 4 Tshombe s political involvement started in 1957 in response to the perceived threat of Baluba domination 4 Political career EditAlong with Godefroid Munongo he founded the Confederation des associations tribales du Katanga CONAKAT party CONAKAT promoted a federal Congo independent of the Belgian colonial empire 5 CONAKAT was founded in October 1958 to address the perceived problems of immigration into Katanga from the other provinces of the Belgian Congo and its platform called for upholding the rights of the indigenous peoples of Katanga by ending the immigration 4 The majority of the CONAKAT supporters were Lunda Batabwa Tshowke and Bayeke most of whom lived in southern Katanga 4 In common with the other members of the Lunda elite the aristocratic Tshombe looked back nostalgically to the Kingdom of Lunda that once covered much of northern Angola the southern Belgian Congo and Northern Rhodesia modern Zambia in the 17th and 18th centuries 6 CONAKAT formed an electoral alliance with the Union Katangaise party that represented the white Belgian settlers of Katanga 6 Both CONAKAT and the Union Katangaise wanted very broad autonomy for Katanga within an independent Congo in order to keep the wealth generated by the mining industry within Katanga 6 In contrast to CONAKAT with its calls for autonomy and curbs on immigration the immigrants in Katanga tended to favor the parties that called for a more centralized state President of Katanga Edit Tshombe at the Belgo Congolese Round Table Conference 1960 CONAKAT won control of the Katanga provincial legislature in the May 1960 general elections One month later the Congo became an independent republic Tshombe became President of the autonomous province of Katanga 7 Patrice Lumumba was tasked with forming a national government Members of his party the Mouvement National Congolais were given charge of the portfolios of national defence and interior despite Tshombe s objections 8 The portfolio for economic affairs was awarded to a CONAKAT member but this was undercut by the positioning of nationalists in control of the Ministry and Secretariat for Economic Coordination Mines and land affairs were placed under separate portfolios Tshombe declared that this diluting of CONAKAT s influence rendered his agreement to support the government null and void 9 On the evening of 11 July Tshombe accusing the central government of communist leanings and dictatorial rule announced that Katanga was seceding from the Congo 10 Tshombe had the full support of both Belgium and the Union Miniere in proclaiming Katanga independent 11 One American diplomat described Katanga as a sham reporting to Washington that the State of Katanga was designed mainly for the protection of European lives and property 11 Favoring continued ties with Belgium Tshombe asked the Belgian government to send military officers to recruit and train a Katangese army Tshombe s Belgian military adviser Major Guy Weber on 13 July 1960 appointed Major Jean Marie Crevecouer to train an army for Katanga 12 To disguise its lack of a military the force being raised and trained was called the Katangese gendarmerie but the name was highly misleading as the gendarmerie was in fact an army 13 The majority of the officers training the gendarmerie were Belgian 13 The Belgian historian Jules Gerard Libois wrote During the entire month of August a veritable race against the clock took place with the objective for Tshombe and his advisers of building a more or less efficient gendarmery before the eventual withdraw of the Belgian troops 13 Tshombe engaged in a successful bluff in the summer of 1960 as he maintained that Katanga had the military forces to repel an invasion while an army was being raised 13 Tshombe in Katanga 1962 Tshombe demanded United Nations recognition for independent Katanga and he announced that any intervention by UN troops would be met with force 14 Nonetheless Congolese Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba and his successor Cyrille Adoula successfully requested intervention from UN forces UN forces were sent under the direction of UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold The British diplomat Brian Urquhart who met Tshombe several times wrote Tshombe was not stupid but he desperately wanted to be liked and recognized He tended to agree with the last person he had talked to and could be counted on to go back on any agreement as soon as he had seen his next visitor He was also an accomplished hypochondriac using feigned ill health to avoid answering awkward questions J ai mal a la gorge Monsieur Urquhart I have a sore throat Mr Urquhart he would suddenly whisper Je dois prendre immediatement une piqure I must immediately get a medical shot And that would be the end of the conversation Tshombe was basically a weak person who was always being manipulated by others the Union Miniere right wing politicians in Europe and the United States mercenaries arms dealers and other adventurers who were after his money 15 France wishing to take advantage of Katangese minerals sent to Tshombe the reinforcement of the mercenary Bob Denard and his men It was supported by the networks of Jacques Foccart the Mr Africa of the French government 16 Lumumba s government was dissolved and Lumumba taken prisoner by Mobutu and detained at Camp Hardy in Thysville Harold Charles d Aspremont Lynden Belgian minister for African Affairs sent a highly confidential telegram on 16 January 1961 to the government in Leopoldville President Joseph Kasa Vubu and Mobutu to send Lumumba to Katanga That would have stemmed from Lumumba s increasing popularity among soldiers who might release him Meanwhile soldier mutinies and unrest increased by the day at Prison Camp Hardy in Thysville The telegram has still not been shown to exist Whilst being flown in a Sabena Douglas DC 4 plane to Katanga Lumumba was beaten by the Congolese soldiers escorting him In custody in Katanga Lumumba was visited by Katangese notables and Belgian officers who included Tshombe Godefroid Munongo Kibwe Kitenge Grandelet Son Gat Huyghe Tignee Verscheure Segers and Rougefort Lumumba s execution on 17 January was carried out by a firing squad led by a Belgian mercenary Julien Gat 17 In September 1961 the United Nations launched Operation Morthor with the aim of reintegrating Katanga into the Congo causing Tshombe to flee into Northern Rhodesia for a time 18 However the Katangese gendarmerie proved to be tougher than expected and in the siege of Jadotville Irish troops serving under the United Nations flag were forced to surrender 18 The United Nations secretary general Dag Hammarskjold flew to meet Tshombe to discuss a ceasefire 18 After the meeting Hammarskjold was killed in an airplane crash 18 Tshombe become an iconic figure for American conservatives in the 1960s who saw him as an acceptable African leader 19 The American historian Kyle Burke wrote To them American conservatives Tshombe represented a comfortable kind of decolonization in which elite Africans would manage the transition from colony to nation without altering the existing racial political and economic order thereby ensuring that communists would not gain a foothold in these countries 20 American conservatives presented the Belgian Congo as a place of racial harmony which Tshombe had tried to preserve 21 The principal lobbying group for Tshombe was the American Committee for Aid to Katangan Freedom Fighters that portrayed the United Nations as a communist dominated organization that was seeking to crush Katanga to achieve Soviet foreign policy goals in Africa 11 The support for Tshombe was at least in part related to American domestic politics as the Kennedy administration supported the United Nations against Katanga and the support for Tshombe in the United States came mostly from conservative Republicans and Democrats who used Kennedy s opposition to Tshombe to argue that he was soft on communism 11 By contrast Afro Americans loathed Tshombe seeing him as an Uncle Tom figure a black man who was submissive and docile towards whites 22 Prime Minister of the Congo Edit Prime Minister Tshombe touring Stanleyville in 1964 In 1963 UN forces succeeded in suppressing Katanga driving Tshombe into exile in Northern Rhodesia and then Spain Tshombe took 890 suitcases full of one million gold pieces with him into exile which he placed into various European banks allowing him to live in comfort and luxury 23 At the same time the UN forces found that the Katangese treasury had been stripped bare The entire vault contained only 10 British pounds together with one dead rat 23 In early 1964 the Simba rebellion broke out and the Congolese government rapidly lost control of the entire eastern half of the Congo At the same time Tshombe started to correspond with several of his former enemies such as the justice minister Justin Marie Bomboko the police chief Victor Nendaka and most importantly the commander of the army General Joseph Desire Mobutu 23 As the Armee Nationale Congolaise could not handle the Simbas Mobutu argued that the Congo needed Western help 24 Mobutu had been the king maker of Conglese politics ever since he staged his first coup in 1960 He pressured President Joseph Kasa Vubu to appoint Tshombe premier on the grounds that he was the Congolese politician most likely to secure Western support 25 Most of the economic concessions in the Belgian Congo were para statal as the Belgian state had invested its own funds alongside those of European capitalists in developing the concessions 24 When Belgium granted independence to the Congo in 1960 the Belgians refused to transfer their shares in the concessions to the Congolese state under the grounds that the Congo refused to assume the debts that the Belgians had incurred when developing the concessions which deprived the Congolese state of much needed revenue 24 In March 1964 the Belgian Foreign Minister Paul Henri Spaak visited Leopoldville and agreed to transfer the Belgian shares of the concessions 24 During the same visit Spaak seems to have made appointing Tshombe premier the precondition of the share transfer 24 Finally the administration of John F Kennedy was very hostile towards Tshombe but on 22 November 1963 Kennedy was assassinated Kennedy s successor Lyndon B Johnson was more supportive of Tshombe viewing him as a firmly pro Western politician 26 In July 1964 he returned to the Congo to serve as prime minister in a new coalition government His cabinet was sworn in on 10 July 27 Tshombe s national support was derived from the backing of provincial political bosses customary chiefs and foreign financial interests 28 Among his first acts in office were the lifting of a curfew in Leopoldville the release of 600 political prisoners including Antoine Gizenga and the ordering of Katangese gendarmes to return from their exile in Angola to the Congo and join the national army 27 Tshombe had made extensive use of white mercenaries to fight for Katanga and as the Congolese premier he hired the same mercenaries to fight for the Congo 24 The return of Tshombe to power was met with criticism Malcolm X detested Tshombe as an Uncle Tom and in a 1964 speech in New York called him the worse African ever born and the man who in cold blood cold blood committed an international crime murdered Patrice Lumumba 29 In a New Year s message at the beginning of 1965 Tshombe rejected conciliation with the Simba rebels and called for their total defeat 30 Tshombe formed the federalist Convention Nationale Congolaise CONACO a bloc of forty nine parties for the 1965 general election The party won comfortably gaining 38 seats with the alliance as a whole winning 122 seats Despite this victory Tshombe was dismissed from his position as Prime Minister in October 1965 by President Kasa Vubu and replaced by Evariste Kimba In November General Joseph Mobutu who had just staged a successful coup against Kasa Vubu brought charges of treason against Tshombe who again fled the country and settled in Francoist Spain Later life EditIn 1965 Tshombe s brother Daniel became the Mwaant Yav which greatly added to his appeal in Katanga 31 Traditionally the title of Mwaant Yav alternated between different Lunda royal families but since 1965 the office of Mwaant Yav has been held by members of the Tshombe family 31 In 1967 Tshombe was sentenced to death in absentia On 30 June 1967 he was in a Hawker Siddeley jet aircraft that was hijacked by Francis Bodenan an agent of the French SDECE According to the Congolese government Tshombe was travelling to Africa 32 He was taken to Algeria jailed and placed under house arrest At his trial he was represented by French lawyer Rene Floriot 33 The pilots of the plane Britons Trevor Copleston and David Taylor were released and returned to the United Kingdom The Congolese government demanded his extradition to Congo and his Western supporters agitated for his release 32 The Algerians resisted both demands A part of his supporters gathered to form the Tshombe Emergency Committee in the U S including Marvin Liebman and William F Buckley to press for his release and move to Spain 19 The Tshombe Emergency Committee filed a number of legal challenges to force the Algerians to release Tshombe to no avail 19 Long time aide Michel Struelens travelled to different European cities to lobby for Tshombe eventually to no avail 34 Death and legacy EditTshombe died in Algeria in 1969 The Algerian government called in eight Algerian physicians and three French doctors who concluded that he died in his sleep Later an autopsy concluded a natural death 35 Tshombe s nephew Joseph Kayomb Tshombe stipulated that no medical doctor chosen by the Tshombe family was admitted at the autopsy 36 Further doubts were raised regarding Tshombe s death by former governor of Katanga and political exile Daniel Monguya Mbenge who accused French lawyer Jacques Verges of poisoning Tshombe by order of Mobutu 37 In the context of a series of interviews regarding a conspiracy theory about the assassination of US President John F Kennedy Belgian mercenary Joseph Smal told author Stephen J Rivele that Tshombe was killed by two injections with two different substances prepared by the CIA 38 Moise Tshombe was buried in a Methodist service at Etterbeek Cemetery near Brussels Belgium 39 Owing to his role in the death of Lumumba and his association with Western interests Tshombe s name became synonymous with sellout to Black African nationalists 40 41 a Tshombe s nephew Jean Nguza Karl i Bond later became an important politician and served as prime minister from 1980 to 1981 43 Portrayals EditThe plot of the 1978 war film The Wild Geese is based in part on speculation that Tshombe s plane had initially been diverted to Rhodesia before being sent to Algeria The film s characters Colonel Allen Faulkner and President Julius Limbani were largely based on Tshombe and his military ally Maj Mad Mike Hoare 44 Tshombe has been played twice by the French actor Pascal N Zonzi first in the 2000 film Lumumba and again in the 2011 film Mister Bob 45 46 He was portrayed by Danny Sapani in the 2016 film The Siege of Jadotville 47 Honours EditKnight Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown 48 Notes Edit A derivative of Tshombe s name chombe was incorporated into the Shona language as a word for sellout Kuchomba is the verb form 42 References Edit Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 32 a b c d e Othen 2015 p 10 Larmer 2013 p 162 a b c d e Larmer 2013 p 162 163 Nzongola Ntalaja Georges February 2002 The Congo from Leopold to Kabila A People s History Zed Books ISBN 978 1 84277 053 5 a b c Larmer 2013 p 163 Congo Kinshasa provinces www rulers org Retrieved 17 September 2017 Hoskyns 1965 p 79 Gerard Libois 1966 p 85 Hoskyns 1965 p 99 a b c d Burke 2018 p 44 Larmer 2013 p 164 a b c d Larmer 2013 p 165 Katanga Premier Warns U N Force PDF The New York Times Reuters 21 July 1960 Retrieved 10 January 2016 Urquhart Brian 13 February 2019 Character Sketches Mobutu and Tshombe Two Conoglese Rogues United Nations Retrieved 24 April 2022 Wauthier Claude 2002 Jacques Foccart et les mauvais conseils de Felix Houphouet Boigny Cahiers du Centre de recherches historiques in French 30 Retrieved 28 May 2021 The Assassination of Lumumba Ludo De Witte 2003 ISBN 1 85984 410 3 a b c d Larmer 2013 p 167 a b c Burke 2018 p 47 Burke 2018 p 47 48 Burke 2018 p 48 Meriwether 2009 p 224 a b c Gonze 1964 p 4 a b c d e f Gonze 1964 p 5 Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 69 Gonze 1964 p 4 5 a b O Ballance 1999 p 70 Semonin 1968 p 20 Tuck 2014 p 155 156 O Ballance 1999 p 85 a b Kennes amp Larmer 2016 p 68 a b Gibbs David N 1991 The Political Economy of Third World Intervention University of Chicago Press pp 152 167 168 ISBN 0 226 29071 9 Floriot loses one Time magazine 28 July 1967 Freiherr von Mullenheim Rechberg Burkard 1998 Entfuhrung und Tod des Moise Tshombe Das Ende einer Hoffnung fur den Kongo LIT pp 72 73 ISBN 3 8258 3940 0 Algeria End in Captivity Time 1969 Retrieved 12 October 2021 Kayomb Tshombe Joseph 1997 Le rapt de Tshombe La mise a mort du leader congolais Brussels Quorum p 102 ISBN 9782873990206 Monguya Mbenge Daniel 1977 Histoire secrete du Zaire L autopsie de la barbarie au service du monde Brussels Editions de l esperance p 127 Report by Steve Rivele on Second European trip January 1986 PDF p 9 Tshombe is Buried in Brussels Sons Weep at His Grave The New York Times UPI 6 July 1969 p 6 Retrieved 18 January 2016 Sibanda 2005 p 116 Fouere 2015 p 158 Pekeshe Munhamu 15 January 2015 Tshombe Geneva and detente in the village The Patriot Retrieved 15 May 2018 Akyeampong amp Gates 2012 p 299 Mercenary Mad Mike Hoare dies aged 100 www bbc com 3 February 2020 Retrieved 26 February 2020 Lumumba Full Cast amp Crew TV Guide Retrieved 24 April 2022 Marshall Andrew 18 June 2021 Mister Bob 2011 Military Gogglebox Retrieved 23 April 2022 Uhlich Keith 6 October 2016 The Siege of Jadotville TV Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 23 April 2022 Frankel Benjamin ed The Cold War 1945 1991 Leaders and other important figures in the Soviet Union Eastern Europe China and the Third World p 339Sources EditAkyeampong Emmanuel Kwaku Gates Henry Louis Jr eds 2012 Dictionary of African Biography Vol 3 New York Oxford University Press USA ISBN 978 0 19 538207 5 Burke Kyle 2018 Revolutionaries for the Right Anticommunist Internationalism and Paramilitary Warfare in the Cold War Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9781469640747 Fouere Marie Aude ed 2015 Remembering Julius Nyerere in Tanzania History Memory Legacy illustrated reprint ed Mkuki na Nyota Publishers ISBN 9789987753260 Gerard Libois Jules 1966 Katanga Secession translated ed Madison WI University of Wisconsin Press OCLC 477435 Gonze Colin September 1964 Tshombe in Wonderland Africa Today 11 7 4 6 Hoskyns Catherine 1965 The Congo Since Independence January 1960 December 1961 London Oxford University Press OCLC 414961 Kanza Thomas R 1994 The Rise and Fall of Patrice Lumumba Conflict in the Congo expanded ed Rochester VT Schenkman Books Inc ISBN 0 87073 901 8 Kennes Erik Larmer Miles 2016 The Katangese Gendarmes and War in Central Africa Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253021502 Larmer Miles 2013 Of Local Identities and Transnational Conflict The Katangese Gendarmes and Central Southern Africa s Forty Years War 1960 1999 In Bruce Collins Nir Arielli ed Transnational Soldiers Foreign Military Enlistment in the Modern Era London Palgrave Macmillan pp 160 180 ISBN 9780230319684 Meriwether James H 2009 Proudly We Can Be Africans Black Americans and Africa 1935 1961 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9780807860410 O Ballance Edgar 1999 The Congo Zaire Experience 1960 98 Basingstoke England Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 28648 1 Othen Christopher 2015 Katanga 1960 63 Mercenaries Spies and the African Nation that Waged War on the World Cheltenham The History Press ISBN 978 0750989169 Semonin Paul January 1968 Mobutu and the Congolese The World Today 24 1 20 29 JSTOR 40394031 Sibanda Eliakim M 2005 The Zimbabwe African People s Union 1961 87 A Political History of Insurgency in Southern Rhodesia illustrated ed Africa World Press ISBN 9781592212767 Tuck Stephen 2014 The Night Malcolm X Spoke at the Oxford Union A Transatlantic Story of Antiracist Protest Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 9780520279339 Further reading EditColvin Ian The rise and fall of Moise Tshombe A biography Frewin 1968 De Witte Ludo 2003 The Assassination of Lumumba Verso ISBN 1 85984 410 3 Gibbs David N Dag Hammarskjold the United Nations and the Congo Crisis of 1960 1 a reinterpretation Journal of Modern African Studies 31 1 1993 163 174 online Kalb Madeleine G The Congo cables the cold war in Africa from Eisenhower to Kennedy 1982 Mazrui Ali A Moise Tshombe and the Arabs 1960 to 1968 Race 10 3 1969 285 304 O Brien Conor Cruise The UN Congo and Tshombe Transition 15 1964 29 31 onlineExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Moise Tshombe Moise Kapend Tshombe Find A Grave Moise Tshombe on YouTube Archive Moise Tshombe Royal Museum for Central AfricaPolitical officesPreceded byCyrille Adoula Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo10 July 1964 13 October 1965 Succeeded byEvariste Kimba Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moise Tshombe amp oldid 1157100394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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