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Mobutu Sese Seko

Mobutu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbendu Wa Za Banga[a] (/məbˈt ˈsɛs ˈsɛk/; born Joseph-Désiré Mobutu; 14 October 1930 – 7 September 1997) was a Congolese politician and military officer who was the president of Zaire from 1965 to 1997 (known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo until 1971). He also served as Chairman of the Organisation of African Unity from 1967 to 1968. During the Congo Crisis, Mobutu, serving as Chief of Staff of the Army and supported by Belgium and the United States, deposed the democratically elected government of left-wing nationalist Patrice Lumumba in 1960. Mobutu installed a government that arranged for Lumumba's execution in 1961, and continued to lead the country's armed forces until he took power directly in a second coup in 1965.

Mobutu Sese Seko
Mobutu in 1983
President of Zaire
In office
27 October 1971 – 16 May 1997
Preceded byPost established
Succeeded byPost abolished
Laurent-Désiré Kabila (as President of the re-established DRC)
President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
In office
24 November 1965 – 27 October 1971
Preceded byJoseph Kasa-Vubu
Succeeded byPost abolished
Personal details
Born
Joseph-Désiré Mobutu

(1930-10-14)14 October 1930
Lisala, Équateur, Belgian Congo
Died7 September 1997(1997-09-07) (aged 66)
Rabat, Rabat-Salé-Kénitra, Morocco
NationalityCongolese
Political partyPopular Movement of the Revolution
Spouse(s)
(m. 1955; died 1977)

(m. 1980⁠–⁠1997)
Children21 (including Kongulu and Nzanga)
Military service
Branch/service
Years of service1949–1997
RankField Marshal (Army)
Admiral (Navy)
Commander in Chief (Military)
Battles/warsCongo Crisis
Shaba invasions
First Congo War

To consolidate his power, he established the Popular Movement of the Revolution as the sole legal political party in 1967, changed the Congo's name to Zaire in 1971, and his own name to Mobutu Sese Seko in 1972. Mobutu claimed that his political ideology was "neither left nor right, nor even centre",[1] though nevertheless he developed a regime that was intensely autocratic even by African standards of his time. He attempted to purge the country of all colonial cultural influence through his program of "national authenticity".[2][3] Mobutu was the object of a pervasive cult of personality.[4] During his rule, he amassed a large personal fortune through economic exploitation and corruption, leading some to call his rule a "kleptocracy".[5][6] He presided over a period of widespread human rights violations. Under his rule, the nation also suffered from uncontrolled inflation, a large debt, and massive currency devaluations.

Mobutu received strong support (military, diplomatic and economic) from the United States, France, and Belgium, who believed he was a strong opponent of communism in Francophone Africa. He also built close ties with the governments of apartheid South Africa, Israel and the Greek junta. From 1972 onward, he was also supported by Mao Zedong of China, mainly due to his anti-Soviet stance but also as part of Mao's attempts to create a bloc of Afro-Asian nations led by him. The massive Chinese economic aid that flowed into Zaire gave Mobutu more flexibility in his dealings with Western governments, allowed him to identify as an "anti-capitalist revolutionary", and enabled him to avoid going to the International Monetary Fund for assistance.[7]

By 1990, economic deterioration and unrest forced Mobutu Sese Seko into coalition with his power opponents. Although he used his troops to thwart change, his antics did not last long. In May 1997, rebel forces led by Laurent-Désiré Kabila overran the country and forced him into exile. Already suffering from advanced prostate cancer, he died three months later in Morocco. Mobutu was notorious for corruption, nepotism, and the embezzlement of between US$4 billion and $15 billion during his rule. He was known for extravagances such as shopping trips to Paris via the supersonic Concorde aircraft.[8]

Biography

Early years and education

Mobutu, a member of the Ngbandi ethnic group,[9] was born in 1930 in Lisala, Belgian Congo.[10] Mobutu's mother, Marie Madeleine Yemo, was a hotel maid who fled to Lisala to escape the harem of a local village chief. There she met and married Albéric Gbemani, a cook for a Belgian judge.[11] Shortly afterward she gave birth to Mobutu. The name "Mobutu" was selected by an uncle.

Gbemani died when Mobutu was eight.[12] Thereafter, he was raised by an uncle and a grandfather.

The Belgian judge's wife took a liking to Mobutu and taught him to speak, read, and write fluently in the French language, the official language of the country in the colonial period. His widowed mother Yemo relied on the help of relatives to support her four children, and the family moved often. Mobutu's earliest education took place in the capital Léopoldville (now Kinshasa). His mother eventually sent him to an uncle in Coquilhatville (present-day Mbandaka), where he attended the Christian Brothers School, a Catholic-mission boarding school. A physically imposing figure (he eventually stood over six feet [2 metres] tall) Mobutu dominated school sports. He also excelled in academic subjects and ran the class newspaper. He was known for his pranks and impish sense of humor.

A classmate recalled that when the Belgian priests, whose first language was Dutch, made an error in French, Mobutu would leap to his feet in class and point out the mistake. In 1949 Mobutu stowed away aboard a boat, traveling downriver to Léopoldville, where he met a girl. The priests found him several weeks later. At the end of the school year, in lieu of being sent to prison, he was ordered to serve seven years in the colonial army, the Force Publique (FP). This was a usual punishment for rebellious students.[13]

Army service

Mobutu found discipline in army life, as well as a father figure in Sergeant Louis Bobozo. Mobutu kept up his studies by borrowing European newspapers from the Belgian officers and books from wherever he could find them, reading them on sentry duty and whenever he had a spare moment. His favourites were the writings of French president Charles de Gaulle, British prime minister Winston Churchill, and Italian Renaissance philosopher Niccolò Machiavelli. After passing a course in accounting, Mobutu began to dabble professionally in journalism. Still angry after his clashes with the school priests, he did not marry in a church. His contribution to the wedding festivities was a crate of beer, all his army salary could afford.[14]

Early political involvement

As a soldier, Mobutu wrote in pseudonym on contemporary politics for Actualités Africaines (African News), a magazine set up by a Belgian colonial. In 1956, he quit the army and became a full-time journalist,[15] writing for the Léopoldville daily L'Avenir.[16]

Two years later, he went to Belgium to cover the 1958 World Exposition and stayed to receive training in journalism. By this time, Mobutu had met many of the young Congolese intellectuals who were challenging colonial rule. He became friendly with Patrice Lumumba and joined Lumumba's Congolese National Movement (MNC). Mobutu eventually became Lumumba's personal aide. Several contemporaries indicate that Belgian intelligence had recruited Mobutu to be an informer to the government.[17]

During the 1960 talks in Brussels on Congolese independence, the US embassy held a reception for the Congolese delegation. Embassy staff were each assigned a list of delegation members to meet, and discussed their impressions afterward. The ambassador noted, "One name kept coming up. But it wasn't on anyone's list because he wasn't an official delegation member, he was Lumumba's secretary. But everyone agreed that this was an extremely intelligent man, very young, perhaps immature, but a man with great potential."[18]

Following the general election, Lumumba was tasked with creating a government. He gave Mobutu the office of Secretary of State to the Presidency. Mobutu held much influence in the final determination of the rest of the government.[19]

Congo Crisis

 
Colonel Mobutu in 1960
 
Mobutu in a 1963 visit to Israel, where he participated in a shortened IDF paratrooper course

On 5 July 1960, soldiers of the Force Publique stationed at Camp Léopold II in Léopoldville, dissatisfied with their all-white leadership and working conditions, mutinied. The revolt spread across the region in the following days. Mobutu assisted other officials in negotiating with the mutineers to secure the release of the officers and their families.[20] On 8 July the full Council of Ministers convened in an extraordinary session under the chairmanship of President Joseph Kasa-Vubu at Camp Léopold II to address the task of Africanising the garrison.[21]

The former had shown some influence over the mutinying troops, but Kasa-Vubu and the Bakongo ministers feared that he would enact a coup d'état if he were given power. The latter was perceived as calmer and more thoughtful.[22] Lumumba saw Mpolo as courageous, but favored Mobutu's prudence. As the discussions continued, the cabinet began to divide according to who they preferred to serve as chief of staff. Lumumba wanted to keep both men in his government and wished to avoid upsetting one of their camps of supporters.[22] In the end Mobutu was given the role and awarded the rank of colonel.[23] The following day government delegations left the capital to oversee the Africanisation of the army; Mobutu was sent to Équateur.[24]

The British diplomat Brian Urquhart serving with the United Nations wrote: "When I first met Mobutu in July 1960, he was Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba’s chief military assistant and had just promoted himself from sergeant to lieutenant-colonel. By comparison with his boss, Mobutu was a pillar of pragmatism and common sense. It was to him that we appealed when our people were arrested by Lumumba’s hashish-stimulated guards. It was he who would bring up, in a disarmingly casual way, Lumumba’s most outrageous requests – that the UN should, for example, meet the pay roll of the potentially mutinous Congolese army. In those early days, Mobutu seemed a comparatively sensible young man, one who might even, at least now and then, have the best interests of his newly independent country at heart."[25]

Encouraged by a Belgian government intent on maintaining its access to rich Congolese mines, secessionist violence erupted in the south. Concerned that the United Nations force sent to help restore order was not helping to crush the secessionists, Lumumba turned to the Soviet Union for assistance. He received massive military aid and about a thousand Soviet technical advisers within six weeks. As this was during the Cold War, the US government feared that the Soviet activity was a maneuver to spread communist influence in Central Africa. Kasa-Vubu was encouraged by the US and Belgium to dismiss Lumumba, which he did on 5 September. An outraged Lumumba declared Kasa-Vubu deposed. Parliament refused to recognise the dismissals and urged reconciliation, but no agreement was reached.

Lumumba and Kasa-Vubu each ordered Mobutu to arrest the other. As Army Chief of Staff, Mobutu came under great pressure from multiple sources. The embassies of Western nations, which helped pay the soldiers' salaries, as well as Kasa-Vubu and Mobutu's subordinates, all favored getting rid of the Soviet presence. On 14 September Mobutu launched a bloodless coup, declaring both Kasa-Vubu and Lumumba to be "neutralised" and establishing a new government of university graduates, the College of Commissioners-General. Lumumba rejected this action but was forced to retire to his residence, where UN peacekeepers prevented Mobutu's soldiers from arresting him. Urquhart recalled that on the day of the coup, Mobutu showed up unannounced at the UN headquarters in Leopoldville and refused to leave, until the radio announced the coup, leading Mobutu to say over and over again "C’est moi!" ("This is me!").[25] Recognizing that Mobutu had only gone to the UN headquarters in case the coup should fail, Urquhart ordered him out.[25]

Losing confidence that the international community would support his reinstatement, Lumumba fled in late November to join his supporters in Stanleyville to establish a new government. He was captured by Mobutu's troops in early December, and incarcerated at his headquarters in Thysville. However, Mobutu still considered him a threat, and transferred him to the rebelling State of Katanga on 17 January 1961. Lumumba disappeared from public view. It was later discovered that he was executed the same day by the secessionist forces of Moise Tshombe, after Mobutu's government turned him over.[26]

 
Colonel Joseph-Desiré Mobutu (left) with President Joseph Kasa-Vubu, 1961

On 23 January 1961, Kasa-Vubu promoted Mobutu to major-general. Historian De Witte argues that this was a political action, "aimed to strengthen the army, the president's sole support, and Mobutu's position within the army".[27]

In 1964, Pierre Mulele led partisans in another rebellion. They quickly occupied two-thirds of the Congo. In response, the Congolese army, led by Mobutu, reconquered the entire territory through 1965.

Second coup and consolidation of power

Prime Minister Moise Tshombe's Congolese National Convention had won a large majority in the March 1965 elections, but Kasa-Vubu appointed an anti-Tshombe leader, Évariste Kimba, as prime minister-designate. However, Parliament twice refused to confirm him. With the government in near-paralysis, Mobutu seized power in a bloodless coup on 24 November. He had turned 35 a month earlier.[28]

Under the auspices of a state of exception (regime d'exception), Mobutu assumed sweeping—almost absolute—powers for five years.[29] In his first speech upon taking power, Mobutu told a large crowd at Léopoldville's main stadium that, since politicians had brought the Congo to ruin in five years, it would take him at least that long to set things right again, and therefore there would be no more political party activity for five years.[30] On 30 November 1965 Parliament approved a measure which turned over most legislative powers to Mobutu and his cabinet, though it retained the right to review his decrees. In early March 1966 he opened a new session of Parliament by declaring that he was revoking their right of review, and two weeks later his government permanently suspended the body and assumed all of its remaining functions.[31]

 
A Congolese cotton shirt embellished with a portrait of Mobutu from the collection of the Tropenmuseum in Amsterdam

Initially, Mobutu's government presented itself as apolitical or even anti-political. The word "politician" carried negative connotations, and became almost synonymous with someone who was wicked or corrupt. In 1966 the Corps of Volunteers of the Republic was established, a vanguard movement designed to mobilize popular support behind Mobutu, who was proclaimed the nation's "Second National Hero" after Lumumba. Despite the role he played in Lumumba's ousting, Mobutu worked to present himself as a successor to Lumumba's legacy. One of his key tenets early in his rule was "authentic Congolese nationalism". In 1966, Mobutu started renaming cities that had European names with more "authentic" African names, and in this way Leopoldville became Kinshasa, Stanleyville became Kisangani and Élisabethville became Lubumbashi.[32]

1967 marked the debut of the Popular Movement of the Revolution (MPR), which until 1990 was the nation's only legal political party. Among the themes advanced by the MPR in its doctrine, the Manifesto of N'Sele, were nationalism, revolution, and "authenticity". Revolution was described as a "truly national revolution, essentially pragmatic", which called for "the repudiation of both capitalism and communism". One of the MPR's slogans was "Neither left nor right", to which would be added "nor even center" in later years.

That same year, all trade unions were consolidated into a single union, the National Union of Zairian Workers, and brought under government control. Mobutu intended for the union to serve as an instrument of support for government policy, rather than as an independent group. Independent trade unions were illegal until 1991.

 
Mobutu sworn in as President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo following the 1970 election

Facing many challenges early in his rule, Mobutu converted much opposition into submission through patronage; those he could not co-opt, he dealt with forcefully. In 1966, four cabinet members were arrested on charges of complicity in an attempted coup, tried by a military tribunal, and publicly executed in an open-air spectacle witnessed by over 50,000 people. Uprisings by former Katangan gendarmeries were crushed, as were the Stanleyville mutinies of 1967 led by white mercenaries.[33] By 1970, nearly all potential threats to his authority had been smashed, and for the most part, law and order was brought to nearly all parts of the country. That year marked the pinnacle of Mobutu's legitimacy and power.

In 1970 King Baudouin of Belgium made a highly successful state visit to Kinshasa. That same year presidential and legislative elections were held. Although the constitution allowed for the existence of two parties, the MPR was the only party allowed to nominate candidates. For the presidential election, Mobutu was the only candidate. Voting was not secret; voters chose a green paper if they supported Mobutu's candidacy, and a red paper if they opposed his candidacy. Casting a green ballot was deemed a vote for hope, while a red ballot was deemed a vote for chaos. Under the circumstances, the result was inevitable–according to official figures, Mobutu was confirmed in office with near-unanimous support, garnering 10,131,669 votes to only 157 "no" votes.[34] It later emerged that almost 30,500 more votes were cast than the actual number of registered voters.[35][36] The legislative elections were held in a similar fashion. Voters were presented with a single list from the MPR; according to official figures, an implausible 98.33% of voters voted in favor of the MPR list.

As he consolidated power, Mobutu set up several military forces whose sole purpose was to protect him. These included the Special Presidential Division, Civil Guard and Service for Action, and Military Intelligence (SNIP).

Authenticity campaign

 
Flag of Zaire

Embarking on a campaign of pro-Africa cultural awareness, called authenticité, Mobutu began renaming cities that reflected the colonial past, starting on 1 June 1966: Leopoldville became Kinshasa, Elisabethville became Lubumbashi, and Stanleyville became Kisangani. In October 1971, he renamed the country as the Republic of Zaire.[32] He ordered the people to change their European names to African ones, and priests were warned that they would face five years' imprisonment if they were caught baptizing a Zairian child with a European name.[32] Western attire and ties were banned, and men were forced to wear a Mao-style tunic known as an abacost (shorthand for à bas le costume, or "down with the suit").[37] Christmas was moved from December to June because it was more of an "authentic" date.[32]

In 1972, in accordance with his own decree of a year earlier, Mobutu renamed himself Mobutu Sese Seko Nkuku Ngbendu Wa Za Banga (meaning "The all-powerful warrior who, because of his endurance and inflexible will to win, goes from conquest to conquest, leaving fire in his wake.").[38][39] Around this time, he eschewed his military uniform in favor of what would become his classic image—the tall, imposing man carrying a walking stick while wearing an abacost, thick-framed glasses, and leopard-skin toque.

In 1974, a new constitution consolidated Mobutu's grip on the country. It defined the MPR as the "single institution" in the country. It was officially defined as "the nation politically organized"—in essence, the state was a transmission belt for the party. All citizens automatically became members of the MPR from birth. The constitution stated that the MPR was embodied by the party's president, who was elected every seven years at its national convention. At the same time, the party president was automatically nominated as the sole candidate for a seven-year term as president of the republic; he was confirmed in office by a referendum. The document codified the emergency powers Mobutu had exercised since 1965; it vested Mobutu with "plenitude of power exercise", effectively concentrating all governing power in his hands. Mobutu was reelected three times under this system, each time by implausibly high margins of 98 percent or more. A single list of MPR candidates was returned to the legislature every five years with equally implausible margins; official figures gave the MPR list unanimous or near-unanimous support. At one of those elections, in 1975, formal voting was dispensed with altogether. Instead, the election took place by acclaim; candidates were presented at public locations around the country where they could be applauded.

One-man rule

 
Mobutu Sese Seko with the Dutch Prince Bernhard in 1973

Early in his rule, Mobutu consolidated power by publicly executing political rivals, secessionists, coup plotters, and other threats to his rule. To set an example, many were hanged before large audiences. Such victims included former Prime Minister Évariste Kimba, who, with three cabinet members—Jérôme Anany (Defense Minister), Emmanuel Bamba (Finance Minister), and Alexandre Mahamba (Minister of Mines and Energy)—was tried in May 1966, and sent to the gallows on 30 May, before an audience of 50,000 spectators. The men were executed on charges of being in contact with Colonel Alphonse Bangala and Major Pierre Efomi, for the purpose of planning a coup. Mobutu explained the executions as follows: "One had to strike through a spectacular example, and create the conditions of regime discipline. When a chief takes a decision, he decides – period."[40]

In 1968, Pierre Mulele, Lumumba's Minister of Education and a rebel leader during the 1964 Simba rebellion, was lured out of exile in Brazzaville on the belief that he would receive amnesty. Instead, he was tortured and killed by Mobutu's forces. While Mulele was still alive, his eyes were gouged out, his genitals were ripped off, and his limbs were amputated one by one.[41]

Mobutu later switched to a new tactic, buying off political rivals. He used the slogan "Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer still"[42] to describe his tactic of co-opting political opponents through bribery. A favorite Mobutu tactic was to play "musical chairs", rotating members of his government, switching the cabinet roster constantly to ensure that no one would pose a threat to his rule. Between November 1965 and April 1997, Mobutu reshuffled his cabinet 60 times.[43] The frequent cabinet reshuffles as intended encouraged insecurity in his ministers, who knew that the mercurial Mobutu would reshuffle his cabinet with no regard for efficiency and competence on the part of his ministers.[43] The frequency that men entered and left the cabinet also encouraged gross corruption because ministers never knew how long they might be in office, thus encouraging them to steal as much as possible while they were in the cabinet.[43] Another tactic was to arrest and sometimes torture dissident members of the government, only to later pardon them and reward them with high office.[43] The Congolese historian Emizet F. Kisangani wrote: "Most public officials knew that regardless of their inefficiency and degree of corruption, they could reenter the government. To hold a government position required neither a sense of management nor a good conscience. On most occasions, effectiveness and a good conscience were major obstacles to political advancement. Mobutu demanded absolute personal allegiance in return for the opportunity to accumulate wealth".[43] As early as 1970, it was estimated that Mobutu had stolen 60% of the national budget that year, marking him as one of the most corrupt leaders in Africa and the world.[43] Kisangani wrote that Mobutu created a system of institutional corruption that greatly debased public morality by rewarding venality and greed.[44]

In 1972, Mobutu tried unsuccessfully to have himself named president for life.[45] In June 1983, he raised himself to the rank of Field Marshal;[46] the order was signed by General Likulia Bolongo. Victor Nendaka Bika, in his capacity as Vice-President of the Bureau of the Central Committee, second authority in the land, addressed a speech filled with praise for President Mobutu.

 
Mobutu Sese Seko in army fatigues, 1978

To gain the revenues of Congolese resources, Mobutu initially nationalized foreign-owned firms and forced European investors out of the country. But in many cases he handed the management of these firms to relatives and close associates, who quickly exercised their own corruption and stole the companies' assets. In 1973–1974, Mobutu launched his "Zairianization" campaign, nationalising foreign owned businesses that were handed over to Zairians.[32] In October 1973, the Arab oil shock ended the "long summer" of prosperity in the West that had begun in 1945, and send the world economy into its sharpest contraction since the Great Depression. One consequence of the oil shock and the resulting global recession was that the price of copper dropped by 50% over the course of 1974, which proved to be a disaster for Zaire as copper was its most important export.[32] The American historian Thomas Odom wrote because of the collapse in copper prices Zaire went from "prosperity to bankruptcy almost overnight" in 1974.[32] The economic collapse forced Zaire to turn towards the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to help its manage its debts which could no longer be serviced.[32] Seeking an alternative source of support as the auditors for the IMF discovered major corruption within the Zairian finances, Mobutu visited China in 1974 and returned wearing a Mao jacket and the new title of Citoyen Mobutu (Citizen Mobutu").[47] Influenced by the Cultural Revolution, Mobutu shifted to the left and announced his intention to "radicalize the Zairian revolution".[47] The businesses that Mobutu had just handed over to Zairians were in turn nationalized and placed under state control.[47] At the same time, Mobutu imposed a 50% salary cut to state employees, which led a failed coup attempt against him in June 1975.[47]

By 1977, Mobutu's nationalizations had precipitated such an economic slump that Mobutu was forced to try to woo foreign investors back.[48] Katangan rebels based in Angola invaded Zaire that year, in retaliation for Mobutu's support for anti-MPLA rebels. France airlifted 1,500 Moroccan paratroopers into the country and repulsed the rebels, ending Shaba I. The rebels attacked Zaire again, in greater numbers, in the Shaba II invasion of 1978. The governments of Belgium and France deployed troops with logistical support from the United States and defeated the rebels again. The poor performance of the Zairian Army during the both Shaba invasions, which humiliated Mobutu by forcing him to ask for foreign troops, did not lead to military reforms.[49] However, Mobutu reduced the size of the Army from 51,000 troops in 1978 down to 23,000 troops in 1980.[49] By 1980, it was estimated that about 90% of the Zairian Army were Ngbandi as Mobutu did not trust the other peoples of Zaire to serve in the Army.[49] The most loyal and best of Mobutu's units were his bodyguards, the Israeli-trained Division Spéciale Présidentille that was made up exclusively of Ngbandi and was always commanded by one of Mobutu's relatives.[50]

Mobutu was re-elected in single-candidate elections in 1977 and 1984. He spent most of his time increasing his personal fortune, which in 1984 was estimated to amount to US$5 billion.[51][52] He held most of it out of the country in Swiss banks (however, a comparatively small $3.4 million was declared found in Swiss banks after he was ousted.[53]). This was almost equivalent to the amount of the country's foreign debt at the time. In a speech that he delivered on 20 May 1976 in a football stadium in Kinshasa that was filled with some 70,000 people, Mobutu openly accepted petty corruption, stating: "If you want to steal, steal a little in a nice way, but if you steal too much to become rich overnight, you will be caught".[54] By 1989, the government was forced to default on international loans from Belgium.

Mobutu owned a fleet of Mercedes-Benz vehicles that he used to travel between his numerous palaces, while the nation's roads deteriorated and many of his people starved. The infrastructure virtually collapsed, and many public service workers went months without being paid. Most of the money was siphoned off to Mobutu, his family, and top political and military leaders. Only the Special Presidential Division – on whom his physical safety depended – was paid adequately or regularly. A popular saying that "the civil servants pretended to work while the state pretended to pay them" expressed this grim reality.[55] The Forces Armées Zaïroises (FAZ) suffered from low morale made worse by irregular salaries, dismal living conditions, shortages of supplies and a venal officer corps.[56] The soldiers of the FAZ behaved very much like a brutal occupying force who supported themselves by robbing the civilian population of Zaire.[56] A recurring feature of Mobutu's rule were the seemingly endless number of roadblocks put by the FAZ who extorted money from the drivers of any passing automobile or lorries.[56]

Another feature of Mobutu's economic mismanagement, directly linked to the way he and his friends siphoned off so much of the country's wealth, was rampant inflation. The rapid decline in the real value of salaries strongly encouraged a culture of corruption and dishonesty among public servants of all kinds.

Mobutu was known for his opulent lifestyle. He cruised on the Congo on his yacht Kamanyola. In Gbadolite, he erected a palace, the "Versailles of the jungle".[57] For shopping trips to Paris, he would charter a Concorde from Air France; he had the Gbadolite Airport constructed with a runway long enough to accommodate the Concorde's extended take-off and landing requirements.[58] In 1989, Mobutu chartered Concorde aircraft F-BTSD for a 26 June – 5 July trip to give a speech at the United Nations in New York City, then again on 16 July for French bicentennial celebrations in Paris (where he was a guest of President François Mitterrand), and on 19 September for a flight from Paris to Gbadolite, and another nonstop flight from Gbadolite to Marseille with the youth choir of Zaire.[59]

Mobutu's rule earned a reputation as one of the world's foremost examples of kleptocracy and nepotism.[60] Close relatives and fellow members of the Ngbandi tribe were awarded high positions in the military and government, and he groomed his eldest son, Nyiwa, to succeed him as president;[61] however, Nyiwa died from AIDS in 1994.[62]

Mobutu led one of the most enduring dictatorships in Africa and amassed a personal fortune estimated to be over US$5 billion by selling his nation's rich natural resources while the people lived in poverty.[63] While in office, he formed a totalitarian regime responsible for numerous human rights violations, attempted to purge the country of all Belgian cultural influences, and maintained an anti-communist stance to gain positive international support.[30][64]

 
10 Makuta coin depicting Mobutu Sese Seko

Mobutu was the subject of one of the most pervasive personality cults of the twentieth century. The evening newscast opened with an image of him descending through clouds like a god. His portraits were hung in many public places, and government officials wore lapel pins bearing his portrait. He held such titles as "Father of the Nation", "Messiah", "Guide of the Revolution", "Helmsman", "Founder", "Savior of the People", and "Supreme Combatant". In the 1996 documentary of the 1974 Foreman–Ali fight in Zaire, dancers receiving the fighters can be heard chanting "Sese Seko, Sese Seko". At one point, in early 1975, the media were forbidden to refer to anyone other than Mobutu by name; others were referred to only by the positions they held.[65][66]

Mobutu successfully capitalized on Cold War tensions among European nations and the United States. He gained significant support from the West and its international organizations such as the International Monetary Fund.[67]

Foreign policy

Relations with Belgium

Relations between Zaire and Belgium wavered between close intimacy and open hostility during the Mobutu years. More often than not, Belgian decision-makers responded in a lackluster way when Mobutu acted against the interests of Belgium, partly explained by the highly divided Belgian political class.[68] Relations soured early in Mobutu's rule over disputes involving the substantial Belgian commercial and industrial holdings in the country, but they warmed soon afterwards. Mobutu and his family were received as personal guests of the Belgian monarch in 1968, and a convention for scientific and technical cooperation was signed that same year. During King Baudouin's highly successful visit to Kinshasa in 1970, a treaty of friendship and cooperation between the two countries was signed. However, Mobutu tore up the treaty in 1974 in protest at Belgium's refusal to ban an anti-Mobutu book written by left-wing lawyer Jules Chomé.[69] Mobutu's "Zairianisation" policy, which expropriated foreign-held businesses and transferred their ownership to Zairians, added to the strain.[70] Mobutu maintained several personal contacts with prominent Belgians. Edmond Leburton, Belgian prime minister between 1973 and 1974, was someone greatly admired by the President.[71] Alfred Cahen, career diplomat and chef de cabinet of minister Henri Simonet, became a personal friend of Mobutu when he was a student at the Université Libre de Bruxelles.[72] Relations with King Baudouin were mostly cordial, until Mobutu released a bold statement about the Belgian royal family. Prime Minister Wilfried Martens recalled in his memoirs that the palace gates closed completely after Mobutu published a handwritten letter of the King.[73] Next to friendly ties with Belgians residing in Belgium, Mobutu had a number of Belgian advisors at his disposal. Some of them, such as Hugues Leclercq and Colonel Willy Mallants, were interviewed in Thierry Michel's documentary Mobutu, King of Zaire.

Relations with France

As what was then the second most populous French-speaking country in the world (it has subsequently come to have a larger population than France) and the most populous one in sub-Saharan Africa,[74] Zaire was of great strategic interest to France.[75] During the First Republic era, France tended to side with the conservative and federalist forces, as opposed to unitarists such as Lumumba.[74] Shortly after the Katangan secession was successfully crushed, Zaire (then called the Republic of the Congo), signed a treaty of technical and cultural cooperation with France. During the presidency of Charles de Gaulle, relations with the two countries gradually grew stronger and closer. In 1971, Finance Minister Valéry Giscard d'Estaing paid a visit to Zaire; later, after becoming president, he would develop a close personal relationship with President Mobutu, and became one of the regime's closest foreign allies. During the Shaba invasions, France sided firmly with Mobutu: during the first Shaba invasion, France airlifted 1,500 Moroccan troops to Zaire, and the rebels were repulsed;[76] a year later, during the second Shaba invasion, France itself (along with Belgium) would send French Foreign Legion paratroopers (2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment) to aid Mobutu.[77][78][79]

Relations with the People's Republic of China

Initially, Zaire's relationship with the People's Republic of China was no better than its relationship with the Soviet Union. Memories of Chinese aid to Mulele and other Maoist rebels in Kwilu province during the ill-fated Simba Rebellion remained fresh on Mobutu's mind. He also opposed seating the PRC at the United Nations. However, by 1972, he began to see the Chinese in a different light, as a counterbalance to both the Soviet Union as well as his intimate ties with the United States, Israel, and South Africa.[80][81] In November 1972, Mobutu extended diplomatic recognition to the Chinese (as well as East Germany and North Korea). The following year, Mobutu paid a visit to Beijing, where he met with chairman Mao Zedong and received promises of $100 million in technical aid.

In 1974, Mobutu made a surprise visit to both China and North Korea, during the time he was originally scheduled to visit the Soviet Union. Upon returning home, both his politics and rhetoric became markedly more radical; it was around this time that Mobutu began criticizing Belgium and the United States (the latter for not doing enough, in Mobutu's opinion, to combat white minority rule in South Africa and Rhodesia), introduced the "obligatory civic work" program called salongo, and initiated "radicalization" (an extension of 1973's "Zairianization" policy). Mobutu even borrowed a title – the Helmsman – from Mao. Incidentally, late 1974 to early 1975 was when his personality cult reached its peak.

China and Zaire shared a common goal in central Africa, namely doing everything in their power to halt Soviet gains in the area. Accordingly, both Zaire and China covertly funneled aid to the National Liberation Front of Angola (and later, the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola) in order to prevent their former allies, the People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola, who were supported and augmented by Cuban forces, from coming to power. The Cubans, who exercised considerable influence in Africa in support of leftist and anti-imperialist forces, were heavily sponsored by the Soviet Union during the period. In addition to inviting Holden Roberto, the leader of the National Liberation Front of Angola, and his guerrillas to Beijing for training, China provided weapons and money to the rebels. Zaire itself launched an ill-fated, pre-emptive invasion of Angola in a bid to install a pro-Kinshasa government, but was repulsed by Cuban troops. The expedition was a fiasco with far-reaching repercussions, most notably the Shaba I and Shaba II invasions, both of which China opposed. China sent military aid to Zaire during both invasions, and accused the Soviet Union and Cuba (who were alleged to have supported the Shaban rebels, although this was and remains speculation) of working to de-stabilize central Africa.

Relations with the Soviet Union

Mobutu's relationship with the Soviet Union was frosty and tense. A staunch anti-communist, he was not anxious to recognize the Soviets; the USSR had supported—though mostly in words—both Patrice Lumumba, Mobutu's democratically elected predecessor, and the Simba rebellion. However, to project a non-aligned image, he did renew ties in 1967; the first Soviet ambassador arrived and presented his credentials in 1968.[82] Mobutu did, however, join the United States in condemning the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia that year.[83] Mobutu viewed the Soviet presence as advantageous for two reasons: it allowed him to maintain an image of non-alignment, and it provided a convenient scapegoat for problems at home. For example, in 1970, he expelled four Soviet diplomats for carrying out "subversive activities", and in 1971, twenty Soviet officials were declared persona non grata for allegedly instigating student demonstrations at Lovanium University.[84]

Moscow was the only major world capital Mobutu never visited, although he did accept an invitation to do so in 1974. For reasons unknown, he cancelled the visit at the last minute, and toured the People's Republic of China and North Korea instead.[85]

Relations cooled further in 1975, when the two countries found themselves on opposing sides in the Angolan Civil War. This had a dramatic effect on Zairian foreign policy for the next decade; bereft of his claim to African leadership (Mobutu was one of the few leaders who refused to recognize the Marxist government of Angola), Mobutu turned increasingly to the US and its allies, adopting pro-American stances on such issues as the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and Israel's position in international organizations.

Relations with the United States

 
Mobutu Sese Seko and Richard Nixon in Washington, D.C., October 1973
 
Mobutu Sese Seko and U.S. President George H. W. Bush in Washington, D.C., 1989.

For the most part, Zaire enjoyed warm relations with the United States. The United States was the third largest donor of aid to Zaire (after Belgium and France), and Mobutu befriended several US presidents, including Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and George H. W. Bush. Relations did cool significantly in 1974–1975 over Mobutu's increasingly radical rhetoric (which included his scathing denunciations of American foreign policy),[86] and plummeted to an all-time low in the summer of 1975, when Mobutu accused the Central Intelligence Agency of plotting his overthrow and arrested eleven senior Zairian generals and several civilians, and condemned (in absentia) a former head of the Central Bank (Albert Ndele).[86] However, many people viewed these charges with skepticism; in fact, one of Mobutu's staunchest critics, Nzongola-Ntalaja, speculated that Mobutu invented the plot as an excuse to purge the military of talented officers who might otherwise pose a threat to his rule.[87] In spite of these hindrances, the chilly relationship quickly thawed when both countries found each other supporting the same side during the Angolan Civil War.

Because of Mobutu's poor human rights record, the Carter Administration put some distance between itself and the Kinshasa government;[88] even so, Zaire received nearly half the foreign aid Carter allocated to sub-Saharan Africa.[89] During the first Shaba invasion, the United States played a relatively inconsequential role; its belated intervention consisted of little more than the delivery of non-lethal supplies. But during the second Shaba invasion, the US played a much more active and decisive role by providing transportation and logistical support to the French and Belgian paratroopers that were deployed to aid Mobutu against the rebels. Carter echoed Mobutu's (unsubstantiated) charges of Soviet and Cuban aid to the rebels, until it was apparent that no hard evidence existed to verify his claims.[90] In 1980, the US House of Representatives voted to terminate military aid to Zaire, but the US Senate reinstated the funds, in response to pressure from Carter and American business interests in Zaire.[91]

Mobutu enjoyed a very warm relationship with the Reagan Administration, through financial donations. During Reagan's presidency, Mobutu visited the White House three times, and criticism of Zaire's human rights record by the US was effectively muted. During a state visit by Mobutu in 1983, Reagan praised the Zairian strongman as "a voice of good sense and goodwill".[92]

Mobutu also had a cordial relationship with Reagan's successor, George H. W. Bush; he was the first African head of state to visit Bush at the White House.[93] Even so, Mobutu's relationship with the US radically changed shortly afterward with the end of the Cold War. With the Soviet Union gone, there was no longer any reason to support Mobutu as a bulwark against communism. Accordingly, the US and other Western powers began pressuring Mobutu to democratize the regime. Regarding the change in US attitude to his regime, Mobutu bitterly remarked: "I am the latest victim of the cold war, no longer needed by the US. The lesson is that my support for American policy counts for nothing."[94] In 1993, Mobutu was denied a visa by the US State Department after he sought to visit Washington, D.C.

Mobutu also had friends in America outside Washington. Mobutu was befriended by televangelist Pat Robertson, who promised to try to get the State Department to lift its ban on the African leader.[95]

Coalition government

 
Gui Polspoel with Frédéric François and Mobutu in Gbadolite, 1992

In May 1990, due to the ending of the Cold War and a change in the international political climate, as well as economic problems and domestic unrest, Mobutu agreed to give up the MPR's monopoly of power. In early May 1990, students studying at the Lubumbashi campus of the National University of Zaire protested against Mobutu's regime, demanding his resignation.[96] On the night of 11 May 1990, electricity was cut off to the campus while a special military unit called Les Hiboux ("The Owls") were sent in, armed with machetes and bayonets.[96] By the dawn of 12 May 1990, at least 290 students had been killed.[96] The massacre led to the nations of the European Economic Community (now the European Union), the United States, and Canada to end all non-humanitarian aid to Zaire, which marked the beginning of the end of Western support for Mobutu.[96]

Mobutu appointed a transitional government that would lead to promised elections but he retained substantial powers. Following the 1991 riots in Kinshasa by unpaid soldiers, Mobutu brought opposition figures into a coalition government, but still connived to retain control of the security services and important ministries. Factional divisions led to the creation of two governments in 1993, one pro- and one anti-Mobutu. The anti-Mobutu government was headed by Laurent Monsengwo and Étienne Tshisekedi of the Union for Democracy and Social Progress (UDPS).

The economic situation was still dismal, and in 1994 the two groups merged into the High Council of Republic – Parliament of Transition (HCR-PT). Mobutu appointed Kengo Wa Dondo, an advocate of austerity and free-market reforms, as prime minister. During this period, Mobutu was becoming increasingly physically frail and during one of his trips to Europe for medical treatment, ethnic Tutsis captured much of eastern Zaire.

Overthrow

The seeds of Mobutu's downfall were sown in the Rwandan Genocide, when about 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were massacred by about 200,000 Hutu extremists aided by the Rwandan government in 1994. The genocide ended when the Tutsi-dominated Rwandan Patriotic Front seized the whole country, leading hundreds of thousands of Hutus including many of the genocidal killers, to flee into refugee camps in eastern Zaire. Mobutu welcomed the Hutu extremists as personal guests and allowed them to establish military and political bases in the eastern territories, from where they attacked and killed ethnic Tutsis across the border in Rwanda and in Zaire itself, ostensibly to prepare for a renewed offensive back into Rwanda. The new Rwandan government began sending military aid to the Zairian Tutsis in response. The resulting conflict began to destabilize eastern Zaire as a whole.

When Mobutu's government issued an order in November 1996 forcing Tutsis to leave Zaire on penalty of death, the ethnic Tutsis in Zaire,[97] known as Banyamulenge, were the focal point of a rebellion. From eastern Zaire, the rebels, aided by foreign government forces under the leadership of President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda and Rwandan Minister of Defense Paul Kagame launched an offensive to overthrow Mobutu, joining forces with locals opposed to him under Laurent-Désiré Kabila as they marched west toward Kinshasa. Burundi and Angola also supported the growing rebellion, which mushroomed into the First Congo War.

Ailing with cancer, Mobutu was in Switzerland for treatment,[98] and he was unable to coordinate the resistance which crumbled in front of the march. The rebel forces would have completely overrun the country far sooner than it ultimately did if not for the country's decrepit infrastructure. In most areas, no paved roads existed; the only vehicle paths were irregularly used dirt roads.

By mid-1997, Kabila's forces resumed their advance, and the remains of Mobutu's army offered almost no resistance. On 16 May 1997, following failed peace talks held in Pointe-Noire on board the South African Navy ship SAS Outeniqua with Kabila and President of South Africa Nelson Mandela (who chaired the talks), Mobutu fled into exile. Kabila's forces, known as the Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo-Zaire (AFDL), proclaimed victory the next day. On 23 May 1997, Zaire was renamed the Democratic Republic of the Congo.[99]

Exile and death

Mobutu went into temporary exile in Togo, until President Gnassingbé Eyadéma insisted that Mobutu leave the country a few days later.[100] From 23 May 1997, he lived mostly in Rabat, Morocco.[101] He died there on 7 September 1997 from prostate cancer at the age of 66. He is interred in an above ground mausoleum at Rabat, in the Christian cemetery known as Cimetière Européen.

In December 2007, the National Assembly of the Democratic Republic of the Congo recommended returning his remains, and interring them in a mausoleum in the DRC, which has not yet taken place. Mobutu remains interred in Morocco.[102]

Family

Mobutu was married twice. He married his first wife, Marie-Antoinette Gbiatibwa Gogbe Yetene, in 1955.[103] They had nine children. She died of heart failure on 22 October 1977 in Genolier, Switzerland, at the age of 36. On 1 May 1980, he married his mistress, Bobi Ladawa, on the eve of a visit by Pope John Paul II, thus legitimizing his relationship in the eyes of the Church. Two of his sons from his first marriage died during his lifetime, Jean-Paul "Nyiwa" (d. 16 September 1994) and Konga (d. 1992). Two more died in the years following his death: Kongulu (d. 24 September 1998), and Manda (d. 27 November 2004).[62] His elder son from his second marriage, Nzanga Mobutu Ngbangawe, now[when?] the head of the family, was a candidate in the 2006 presidential elections and later served in the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo as Minister of State for Agriculture. A daughter, Yakpwa (nicknamed Yaki), was briefly married to a Belgian, Pierre Janssen, who later wrote a book[104] that described Mobutu's lifestyle in vivid detail.

Altogether, Mobutu had at least twenty-one children:[105]

  • With Marie-Antoinette (first wife): Nyiwa, Ngombo, Manda, Konga, Ngawali, Yango, Yakpwa, Kongulu, Ndagbia (9)
  • With Bobi Ladawa (second wife): Nzanga, Giala, Toku, Ndokula (4)
  • With Kosia Ladawa (mistress and twin sister of his second wife): Ya-Litho, Tende, Sengboni (3)
  • With "Mama 41": Senghor, Dongo, Nzanga (3)
  • With Mbanguula: A son (1)
  • With an unknown woman from Brazzaville: Robert (1)

On trips across Zaire he appropriated the droit de cuissage (right to deflower) as local chiefs offered him virgins; this practice was considered an honor for the virgin's family.[106]

In art and literature

Mobutu was the subject of the three-part 1999 Belgian documentary Mobutu, King of Zaire by Thierry Michel. Mobutu was also featured in the 2000 feature film Lumumba, directed by Raoul Peck, which detailed the pre-coup and coup years from the perspective of Lumumba. Mobutu also featured in the 1996 American documentary When We Were Kings, which centred around the famed Rumble in the Jungle boxing bout between George Foreman and Muhammad Ali for the 1974 heavyweight championship of the world which took place in Kinshasa during Mobutu's rule. In the 1978 war adventure film The Wild Geese, the villain, General Ndofa, described in the film as an extremely corrupt leader of a copper-rich nation in central Africa, was a thinly disguised version of Mobutu.[107]

Mobutu also might be considered as the inspiration behind some of the characters in the works of the poetry of Wole Soyinka, the novel A Bend in the River by V. S. Naipaul, and Anthills of the Savannah by Chinua Achebe. William Close, father of actress Glenn Close, was once a personal physician to Mobutu and wrote a book focusing on his service in Zaire. Barbara Kingsolver's 1998 historical novel The Poisonwood Bible depicts the events of the Congo Crisis from a fictional standpoint, featuring the role of Mobutu in the crisis. Mobutu was played by the Belgian actor Marc Zinga in the 2011 film Mister Bob. The French critic Isabelle Hanne praised Zinga's performance as Mobutu, writing he "brilliantly embodies this Shakespearian and bloodthirsty figure."[108] Mobutu was included as an additional promotional card in the card-driven strategy game Twilight Struggle. His card, when played, increases the stability of the country then known as Zaire and increases the influence of the United States over the African nation.

Legacy

 
Mobutu's palace in his hometown of Gbadolite, ransacked after he was deposed and exiled. Photographed c. 2010

According to Mobutu's New York Times obituary: "He built his political longevity on three pillars: violence, cunning, and the use of state funds to buy off enemies. His systematic looting of the national treasury and major industries gave birth to the term 'kleptocracy' to describe a rule of official corruption that reputedly made him one of the world's wealthiest heads of state."[109]

In 2011, Time magazine described him as the "archetypal African dictator".[8]

Mobutu was infamous for embezzling the equivalent of billions of US dollars from his country. According to the most conservative estimates, he stole US$4–5 billion from his country, and some sources put the figure as high as US$15 billion. According to Pierre Janssen, the ex-husband of Mobutu's daughter Yaki, Mobutu had no concern for the cost of the expensive gifts he gave away to his cronies. Janssen married Yaki in a lavish ceremony that included three orchestras, a US$65,000 wedding cake, and a giant fireworks display. Yaki wore a US$70,000 wedding gown and US$3 million worth of jewels. Janssen wrote a book describing Mobutu's daily routine, which included several daily bottles of wine, retainers flown in from overseas, and lavish meals.[66]

According to Transparency International, Mobutu embezzled over US$5 billion from his country, ranking him as the third-most corrupt leader since 1984 and the most corrupt African leader during the same period.[110] Philip Gourevitch, in We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families (1998), wrote:

Mobutu had really staged a funeral for a generation of African leadership of which he—the Dinosaur, as he had long been known—was the paragon: the client dictator of Cold War neocolonialism, monomaniacal, perfectly corrupt, and absolutely ruinous to his nation.

Mobutu was instrumental in bringing the Rumble in the Jungle boxing match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman to Zaire on 30 October 1974. According to the documentary When We Were Kings, promoter Don King promised each fighter five million dollars (U.S.) for the fight. To this end, King offered the bout to any African country that put up the money to host it, in exchange for recognition. Mobutu was willing to fund the ten million dollar purse and host the bout, in order to gain international recognition and legitimacy in the process. Mobutu gained Zaire and its people considerable publicity in the weeks even before the televised bout, as worldwide attention focused on his country. According to a quote in the film, Ali supposedly said: "Some countries go to war to get their names out there, and wars cost a lot more than ten million (dollars)." On 22 September 1974, Mobutu presented the rebuilt 20 May Stadium, a multi-million-dollar sports project constructed to host the Ali-Foreman boxing card, to the Zaire Ministry of Youth and Sport, and to the people of Zaire.[111]

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ The name translates as "the warrior who goes from conquest to conquest, leaving fire in his path", "the warrior who leaves a trail of fire in his path", or "the warrior who knows no defeat because of his endurance and inflexible will and is all powerful, leaving fire in his wake as he goes from conquest to conquest".

References

Citations

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General and cited references

Books

English

  • Ayittey, George B.N. Africa in Chaos: A Comparative History. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0-312-21787-0
  • 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.
  • Callaghy, Thomas M. Politics and Culture in Zaire. Center for Political Studies. ASIN B00071MTTW
  • Callaghy, Thomas M. State-Society Struggle: Zaire in Comparative Perspective. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-05720-2
  • Close, William T. Beyond the Storm: Treating the Powerless & the Powerful in Mobutu's Congo/Zaire. Meadowlark Springs Production. ISBN 0-9703371-4-0
  • De Witte, Ludo. The Assassination of Lumumba. Verso. ISBN 1-85984-410-3
  • Edgerton, Robert. The Troubled Heart of Africa: A History of the Congo. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-30486-2
  • Elliot, Jeffrey M., and Mervyn M. Dymally (eds.). Voices of Zaire: Rhetoric or Reality. Washington Institute Press. ISBN 0-88702-045-3
  • French, Howard W. A Continent for the Taking: The Tragedy and Hope of Africa. Vintage. ISBN 1-4000-3027-7
  • Gerard, Emmanuel, and Kuklick, Bruce. Death in the Congo: Murdering Patrice Lumumba, 2015, Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-72527-0
  • Gould, David. Bureaucratic Corruption and Underdevelopment in the Third World: The Case of Zaire. ASIN B0006E1JR8
  • Gran, Guy, and Galen Hull (eds.). Zaire: The Political Economy of Underdevelopment. ISBN 0-275-90358-3
  • Harden, Blaine. Africa: Dispatches from a Fragile Continent. Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 0-395-59746-3
  • 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, Vermont: Schenkman Books, Inc. ISBN 978-0-87073-901-9.
  • Kelly, Sean. America's Tyrant: The CIA and Mobutu of Zaire. American University Press. ISBN 1-879383-17-9
  • Kingsolver, Barbara. The Poisonwood Bible. Harper Collins. ISBN 0-606-19420-7
  • Kisangani, Emizet F. (2016). Historical Dictionary of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Latham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 9781442273160.
  • MacGaffey, Janet (ed.). The Real Economy of Zaire: The Contribution of Smuggling and Other Unofficial Activities to National Wealth. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-1365-3
  • Meditz, Sandra W. and Tim Merrill. Zaire: A Country Study. Claitor's Law Books and Publishing Division. ISBN 1-57980-162-5
  • Mokoli, Mondonga M. State Against Development: The Experience of Post-1965 Zaire. New York: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-28213-7
  • Mwakikagile, Godfrey. Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era, 2006, Chapter Six: "Congo in The 1960s: The Bleeding Heart of Africa." New Africa Press, South Africa. ISBN 978-0-9802534-1-2; Mwakikagile, Godfrey. Africa is in A Mess: What Went Wrong and What Should Be Done, 2006. New Africa Press. ISBN 978-0-9802534-7-4
  • Nzongola-Ntalaja, Georges. The Congo: From Leopold to Kabila: A People's History. Zed Books. ISBN 1-84277-053-5
  • Odom, Thomas Paul (1993). Shaba II The French and Belgian Intervention in Zaire in 1978. Fort Leavenworth: U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Combat Studies Institute. ISBN 9781839310973.
  • Sandbrook, Richard (1985). The Politics of Africa's Economic Stagnation. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-31961-7
  • Schatzberg, Michael G. The Dialectics of Oppression in Zaire. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-20694-4
  • Schatzberg, Michael G. Mobutu or Chaos? University Press of America. ISBN 0-8191-8130-7
  • Taylor, Jeffrey. Facing the Congo: A Modern-Day Journey into the Heart of Darkness. Three Rivers Press. 0609808265
  • Young, Crawford; Turner, Thomas (1985). The Rise and Decline of the Zairian State. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 9780299101138.

French

Other

  • Shaw, Karl (2005) [2004]. Power Mad! [Šílenství mocných] (in Czech). Praha: Metafora. ISBN 978-80-7359-002-4.

External links

  • Speech by Mobutu, vowing to resist the rebel onslaught and remain in power
  • Obituary
  • Anatomy of an Autocracy: Mobutu's 32-Year Reign (The New York Times biography by Howard W. French)
  • Mobutu's legacy: Show over substance
  • Hope and retribution in Zaire, Allan Little, From Our Own Correspondent, BBC News, 24 May 1997.
  • "Zaire's Mobutu Visits America," by Michael Johns, Heritage Foundation Executive Memorandum #239, 29 June 1989
Political offices
Preceded by
Joseph Kasa Vubu
as
President of the Republic of the Congo
President of Zaire
(before 1971 President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo)
24 November 1965 – 16 May 1997
Succeeded by
Laurent-Désiré Kabila
as
President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo

mobutu, sese, seko, kuku, ngbendu, banga, born, joseph, désiré, mobutu, october, 1930, september, 1997, congolese, politician, military, officer, president, zaire, from, 1965, 1997, known, democratic, republic, congo, until, 1971, also, served, chairman, organ. Mobutu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbendu Wa Za Banga a m e b uː ˈ t uː ˈ s ɛ s eɪ ˈ s ɛ k oʊ born Joseph Desire Mobutu 14 October 1930 7 September 1997 was a Congolese politician and military officer who was the president of Zaire from 1965 to 1997 known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo until 1971 He also served as Chairman of the Organisation of African Unity from 1967 to 1968 During the Congo Crisis Mobutu serving as Chief of Staff of the Army and supported by Belgium and the United States deposed the democratically elected government of left wing nationalist Patrice Lumumba in 1960 Mobutu installed a government that arranged for Lumumba s execution in 1961 and continued to lead the country s armed forces until he took power directly in a second coup in 1965 MarshalMobutu Sese SekoMobutu in 1983President of ZaireIn office 27 October 1971 16 May 1997Preceded byPost establishedSucceeded byPost abolishedLaurent Desire Kabila as President of the re established DRC President of the Democratic Republic of the CongoIn office 24 November 1965 27 October 1971Preceded byJoseph Kasa VubuSucceeded byPost abolishedPersonal detailsBornJoseph Desire Mobutu 1930 10 14 14 October 1930Lisala Equateur Belgian CongoDied7 September 1997 1997 09 07 aged 66 Rabat Rabat Sale Kenitra MoroccoNationalityCongolesePolitical partyPopular Movement of the RevolutionSpouse s Marie Antoinette Gbiatibwa Gogbe Yetene m 1955 died 1977 wbr Bobi Ladawa m 1980 1997 wbr Children21 including Kongulu and Nzanga Military serviceBranch serviceForce Publique Armee Nationale Congolaise Forces Armees ZairoisesYears of service1949 1997RankField Marshal Army Admiral Navy Commander in Chief Military Battles warsCongo Crisis Shaba invasions First Congo WarTo consolidate his power he established the Popular Movement of the Revolution as the sole legal political party in 1967 changed the Congo s name to Zaire in 1971 and his own name to Mobutu Sese Seko in 1972 Mobutu claimed that his political ideology was neither left nor right nor even centre 1 though nevertheless he developed a regime that was intensely autocratic even by African standards of his time He attempted to purge the country of all colonial cultural influence through his program of national authenticity 2 3 Mobutu was the object of a pervasive cult of personality 4 During his rule he amassed a large personal fortune through economic exploitation and corruption leading some to call his rule a kleptocracy 5 6 He presided over a period of widespread human rights violations Under his rule the nation also suffered from uncontrolled inflation a large debt and massive currency devaluations Mobutu received strong support military diplomatic and economic from the United States France and Belgium who believed he was a strong opponent of communism in Francophone Africa He also built close ties with the governments of apartheid South Africa Israel and the Greek junta From 1972 onward he was also supported by Mao Zedong of China mainly due to his anti Soviet stance but also as part of Mao s attempts to create a bloc of Afro Asian nations led by him The massive Chinese economic aid that flowed into Zaire gave Mobutu more flexibility in his dealings with Western governments allowed him to identify as an anti capitalist revolutionary and enabled him to avoid going to the International Monetary Fund for assistance 7 By 1990 economic deterioration and unrest forced Mobutu Sese Seko into coalition with his power opponents Although he used his troops to thwart change his antics did not last long In May 1997 rebel forces led by Laurent Desire Kabila overran the country and forced him into exile Already suffering from advanced prostate cancer he died three months later in Morocco Mobutu was notorious for corruption nepotism and the embezzlement of between US 4 billion and 15 billion during his rule He was known for extravagances such as shopping trips to Paris via the supersonic Concorde aircraft 8 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years and education 1 2 Army service 1 3 Early political involvement 1 4 Congo Crisis 1 5 Second coup and consolidation of power 1 6 Authenticity campaign 2 One man rule 2 1 Foreign policy 2 1 1 Relations with Belgium 2 1 2 Relations with France 2 1 3 Relations with the People s Republic of China 2 1 4 Relations with the Soviet Union 2 1 5 Relations with the United States 3 Coalition government 4 Overthrow 5 Exile and death 6 Family 7 In art and literature 8 Legacy 9 Explanatory notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 11 General and cited references 11 1 Books 11 1 1 English 11 1 2 French 11 1 3 Other 12 External linksBiography EditEarly years and education Edit Mobutu a member of the Ngbandi ethnic group 9 was born in 1930 in Lisala Belgian Congo 10 Mobutu s mother Marie Madeleine Yemo was a hotel maid who fled to Lisala to escape the harem of a local village chief There she met and married Alberic Gbemani a cook for a Belgian judge 11 Shortly afterward she gave birth to Mobutu The name Mobutu was selected by an uncle Gbemani died when Mobutu was eight 12 Thereafter he was raised by an uncle and a grandfather The Belgian judge s wife took a liking to Mobutu and taught him to speak read and write fluently in the French language the official language of the country in the colonial period His widowed mother Yemo relied on the help of relatives to support her four children and the family moved often Mobutu s earliest education took place in the capital Leopoldville now Kinshasa His mother eventually sent him to an uncle in Coquilhatville present day Mbandaka where he attended the Christian Brothers School a Catholic mission boarding school A physically imposing figure he eventually stood over six feet 2 metres tall Mobutu dominated school sports He also excelled in academic subjects and ran the class newspaper He was known for his pranks and impish sense of humor A classmate recalled that when the Belgian priests whose first language was Dutch made an error in French Mobutu would leap to his feet in class and point out the mistake In 1949 Mobutu stowed away aboard a boat traveling downriver to Leopoldville where he met a girl The priests found him several weeks later At the end of the school year in lieu of being sent to prison he was ordered to serve seven years in the colonial army the Force Publique FP This was a usual punishment for rebellious students 13 Army service Edit Mobutu found discipline in army life as well as a father figure in Sergeant Louis Bobozo Mobutu kept up his studies by borrowing European newspapers from the Belgian officers and books from wherever he could find them reading them on sentry duty and whenever he had a spare moment His favourites were the writings of French president Charles de Gaulle British prime minister Winston Churchill and Italian Renaissance philosopher Niccolo Machiavelli After passing a course in accounting Mobutu began to dabble professionally in journalism Still angry after his clashes with the school priests he did not marry in a church His contribution to the wedding festivities was a crate of beer all his army salary could afford 14 Early political involvement Edit As a soldier Mobutu wrote in pseudonym on contemporary politics for Actualites Africaines African News a magazine set up by a Belgian colonial In 1956 he quit the army and became a full time journalist 15 writing for the Leopoldville daily L Avenir 16 Two years later he went to Belgium to cover the 1958 World Exposition and stayed to receive training in journalism By this time Mobutu had met many of the young Congolese intellectuals who were challenging colonial rule He became friendly with Patrice Lumumba and joined Lumumba s Congolese National Movement MNC Mobutu eventually became Lumumba s personal aide Several contemporaries indicate that Belgian intelligence had recruited Mobutu to be an informer to the government 17 During the 1960 talks in Brussels on Congolese independence the US embassy held a reception for the Congolese delegation Embassy staff were each assigned a list of delegation members to meet and discussed their impressions afterward The ambassador noted One name kept coming up But it wasn t on anyone s list because he wasn t an official delegation member he was Lumumba s secretary But everyone agreed that this was an extremely intelligent man very young perhaps immature but a man with great potential 18 Following the general election Lumumba was tasked with creating a government He gave Mobutu the office of Secretary of State to the Presidency Mobutu held much influence in the final determination of the rest of the government 19 Congo Crisis Edit Main article Congo Crisis Colonel Mobutu in 1960 Mobutu in a 1963 visit to Israel where he participated in a shortened IDF paratrooper course On 5 July 1960 soldiers of the Force Publique stationed at Camp Leopold II in Leopoldville dissatisfied with their all white leadership and working conditions mutinied The revolt spread across the region in the following days Mobutu assisted other officials in negotiating with the mutineers to secure the release of the officers and their families 20 On 8 July the full Council of Ministers convened in an extraordinary session under the chairmanship of President Joseph Kasa Vubu at Camp Leopold II to address the task of Africanising the garrison 21 The former had shown some influence over the mutinying troops but Kasa Vubu and the Bakongo ministers feared that he would enact a coup d etat if he were given power The latter was perceived as calmer and more thoughtful 22 Lumumba saw Mpolo as courageous but favored Mobutu s prudence As the discussions continued the cabinet began to divide according to who they preferred to serve as chief of staff Lumumba wanted to keep both men in his government and wished to avoid upsetting one of their camps of supporters 22 In the end Mobutu was given the role and awarded the rank of colonel 23 The following day government delegations left the capital to oversee the Africanisation of the army Mobutu was sent to Equateur 24 The British diplomat Brian Urquhart serving with the United Nations wrote When I first met Mobutu in July 1960 he was Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba s chief military assistant and had just promoted himself from sergeant to lieutenant colonel By comparison with his boss Mobutu was a pillar of pragmatism and common sense It was to him that we appealed when our people were arrested by Lumumba s hashish stimulated guards It was he who would bring up in a disarmingly casual way Lumumba s most outrageous requests that the UN should for example meet the pay roll of the potentially mutinous Congolese army In those early days Mobutu seemed a comparatively sensible young man one who might even at least now and then have the best interests of his newly independent country at heart 25 Encouraged by a Belgian government intent on maintaining its access to rich Congolese mines secessionist violence erupted in the south Concerned that the United Nations force sent to help restore order was not helping to crush the secessionists Lumumba turned to the Soviet Union for assistance He received massive military aid and about a thousand Soviet technical advisers within six weeks As this was during the Cold War the US government feared that the Soviet activity was a maneuver to spread communist influence in Central Africa Kasa Vubu was encouraged by the US and Belgium to dismiss Lumumba which he did on 5 September An outraged Lumumba declared Kasa Vubu deposed Parliament refused to recognise the dismissals and urged reconciliation but no agreement was reached Lumumba and Kasa Vubu each ordered Mobutu to arrest the other As Army Chief of Staff Mobutu came under great pressure from multiple sources The embassies of Western nations which helped pay the soldiers salaries as well as Kasa Vubu and Mobutu s subordinates all favored getting rid of the Soviet presence On 14 September Mobutu launched a bloodless coup declaring both Kasa Vubu and Lumumba to be neutralised and establishing a new government of university graduates the College of Commissioners General Lumumba rejected this action but was forced to retire to his residence where UN peacekeepers prevented Mobutu s soldiers from arresting him Urquhart recalled that on the day of the coup Mobutu showed up unannounced at the UN headquarters in Leopoldville and refused to leave until the radio announced the coup leading Mobutu to say over and over again C est moi This is me 25 Recognizing that Mobutu had only gone to the UN headquarters in case the coup should fail Urquhart ordered him out 25 Losing confidence that the international community would support his reinstatement Lumumba fled in late November to join his supporters in Stanleyville to establish a new government He was captured by Mobutu s troops in early December and incarcerated at his headquarters in Thysville However Mobutu still considered him a threat and transferred him to the rebelling State of Katanga on 17 January 1961 Lumumba disappeared from public view It was later discovered that he was executed the same day by the secessionist forces of Moise Tshombe after Mobutu s government turned him over 26 Colonel Joseph Desire Mobutu left with President Joseph Kasa Vubu 1961 On 23 January 1961 Kasa Vubu promoted Mobutu to major general Historian De Witte argues that this was a political action aimed to strengthen the army the president s sole support and Mobutu s position within the army 27 In 1964 Pierre Mulele led partisans in another rebellion They quickly occupied two thirds of the Congo In response the Congolese army led by Mobutu reconquered the entire territory through 1965 Second coup and consolidation of power Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Prime Minister Moise Tshombe s Congolese National Convention had won a large majority in the March 1965 elections but Kasa Vubu appointed an anti Tshombe leader Evariste Kimba as prime minister designate However Parliament twice refused to confirm him With the government in near paralysis Mobutu seized power in a bloodless coup on 24 November He had turned 35 a month earlier 28 Under the auspices of a state of exception regime d exception Mobutu assumed sweeping almost absolute powers for five years 29 In his first speech upon taking power Mobutu told a large crowd at Leopoldville s main stadium that since politicians had brought the Congo to ruin in five years it would take him at least that long to set things right again and therefore there would be no more political party activity for five years 30 On 30 November 1965 Parliament approved a measure which turned over most legislative powers to Mobutu and his cabinet though it retained the right to review his decrees In early March 1966 he opened a new session of Parliament by declaring that he was revoking their right of review and two weeks later his government permanently suspended the body and assumed all of its remaining functions 31 A Congolese cotton shirt embellished with a portrait of Mobutu from the collection of the Tropenmuseum in Amsterdam Initially Mobutu s government presented itself as apolitical or even anti political The word politician carried negative connotations and became almost synonymous with someone who was wicked or corrupt In 1966 the Corps of Volunteers of the Republic was established a vanguard movement designed to mobilize popular support behind Mobutu who was proclaimed the nation s Second National Hero after Lumumba Despite the role he played in Lumumba s ousting Mobutu worked to present himself as a successor to Lumumba s legacy One of his key tenets early in his rule was authentic Congolese nationalism In 1966 Mobutu started renaming cities that had European names with more authentic African names and in this way Leopoldville became Kinshasa Stanleyville became Kisangani and Elisabethville became Lubumbashi 32 1967 marked the debut of the Popular Movement of the Revolution MPR which until 1990 was the nation s only legal political party Among the themes advanced by the MPR in its doctrine the Manifesto of N Sele were nationalism revolution and authenticity Revolution was described as a truly national revolution essentially pragmatic which called for the repudiation of both capitalism and communism One of the MPR s slogans was Neither left nor right to which would be added nor even center in later years That same year all trade unions were consolidated into a single union the National Union of Zairian Workers and brought under government control Mobutu intended for the union to serve as an instrument of support for government policy rather than as an independent group Independent trade unions were illegal until 1991 Mobutu sworn in as President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo following the 1970 election Facing many challenges early in his rule Mobutu converted much opposition into submission through patronage those he could not co opt he dealt with forcefully In 1966 four cabinet members were arrested on charges of complicity in an attempted coup tried by a military tribunal and publicly executed in an open air spectacle witnessed by over 50 000 people Uprisings by former Katangan gendarmeries were crushed as were the Stanleyville mutinies of 1967 led by white mercenaries 33 By 1970 nearly all potential threats to his authority had been smashed and for the most part law and order was brought to nearly all parts of the country That year marked the pinnacle of Mobutu s legitimacy and power In 1970 King Baudouin of Belgium made a highly successful state visit to Kinshasa That same year presidential and legislative elections were held Although the constitution allowed for the existence of two parties the MPR was the only party allowed to nominate candidates For the presidential election Mobutu was the only candidate Voting was not secret voters chose a green paper if they supported Mobutu s candidacy and a red paper if they opposed his candidacy Casting a green ballot was deemed a vote for hope while a red ballot was deemed a vote for chaos Under the circumstances the result was inevitable according to official figures Mobutu was confirmed in office with near unanimous support garnering 10 131 669 votes to only 157 no votes 34 It later emerged that almost 30 500 more votes were cast than the actual number of registered voters 35 36 The legislative elections were held in a similar fashion Voters were presented with a single list from the MPR according to official figures an implausible 98 33 of voters voted in favor of the MPR list As he consolidated power Mobutu set up several military forces whose sole purpose was to protect him These included the Special Presidential Division Civil Guard and Service for Action and Military Intelligence SNIP Authenticity campaign Edit Main article Authenticite Zaire Flag of Zaire Embarking on a campaign of pro Africa cultural awareness called authenticite Mobutu began renaming cities that reflected the colonial past starting on 1 June 1966 Leopoldville became Kinshasa Elisabethville became Lubumbashi and Stanleyville became Kisangani In October 1971 he renamed the country as the Republic of Zaire 32 He ordered the people to change their European names to African ones and priests were warned that they would face five years imprisonment if they were caught baptizing a Zairian child with a European name 32 Western attire and ties were banned and men were forced to wear a Mao style tunic known as an abacost shorthand for a bas le costume or down with the suit 37 Christmas was moved from December to June because it was more of an authentic date 32 In 1972 in accordance with his own decree of a year earlier Mobutu renamed himself Mobutu Sese Seko Nkuku Ngbendu Wa Za Banga meaning The all powerful warrior who because of his endurance and inflexible will to win goes from conquest to conquest leaving fire in his wake 38 39 Around this time he eschewed his military uniform in favor of what would become his classic image the tall imposing man carrying a walking stick while wearing an abacost thick framed glasses and leopard skin toque In 1974 a new constitution consolidated Mobutu s grip on the country It defined the MPR as the single institution in the country It was officially defined as the nation politically organized in essence the state was a transmission belt for the party All citizens automatically became members of the MPR from birth The constitution stated that the MPR was embodied by the party s president who was elected every seven years at its national convention At the same time the party president was automatically nominated as the sole candidate for a seven year term as president of the republic he was confirmed in office by a referendum The document codified the emergency powers Mobutu had exercised since 1965 it vested Mobutu with plenitude of power exercise effectively concentrating all governing power in his hands Mobutu was reelected three times under this system each time by implausibly high margins of 98 percent or more A single list of MPR candidates was returned to the legislature every five years with equally implausible margins official figures gave the MPR list unanimous or near unanimous support At one of those elections in 1975 formal voting was dispensed with altogether Instead the election took place by acclaim candidates were presented at public locations around the country where they could be applauded One man rule Edit Mobutu Sese Seko with the Dutch Prince Bernhard in 1973 Early in his rule Mobutu consolidated power by publicly executing political rivals secessionists coup plotters and other threats to his rule To set an example many were hanged before large audiences Such victims included former Prime Minister Evariste Kimba who with three cabinet members Jerome Anany Defense Minister Emmanuel Bamba Finance Minister and Alexandre Mahamba Minister of Mines and Energy was tried in May 1966 and sent to the gallows on 30 May before an audience of 50 000 spectators The men were executed on charges of being in contact with Colonel Alphonse Bangala and Major Pierre Efomi for the purpose of planning a coup Mobutu explained the executions as follows One had to strike through a spectacular example and create the conditions of regime discipline When a chief takes a decision he decides period 40 In 1968 Pierre Mulele Lumumba s Minister of Education and a rebel leader during the 1964 Simba rebellion was lured out of exile in Brazzaville on the belief that he would receive amnesty Instead he was tortured and killed by Mobutu s forces While Mulele was still alive his eyes were gouged out his genitals were ripped off and his limbs were amputated one by one 41 Mobutu later switched to a new tactic buying off political rivals He used the slogan Keep your friends close but your enemies closer still 42 to describe his tactic of co opting political opponents through bribery A favorite Mobutu tactic was to play musical chairs rotating members of his government switching the cabinet roster constantly to ensure that no one would pose a threat to his rule Between November 1965 and April 1997 Mobutu reshuffled his cabinet 60 times 43 The frequent cabinet reshuffles as intended encouraged insecurity in his ministers who knew that the mercurial Mobutu would reshuffle his cabinet with no regard for efficiency and competence on the part of his ministers 43 The frequency that men entered and left the cabinet also encouraged gross corruption because ministers never knew how long they might be in office thus encouraging them to steal as much as possible while they were in the cabinet 43 Another tactic was to arrest and sometimes torture dissident members of the government only to later pardon them and reward them with high office 43 The Congolese historian Emizet F Kisangani wrote Most public officials knew that regardless of their inefficiency and degree of corruption they could reenter the government To hold a government position required neither a sense of management nor a good conscience On most occasions effectiveness and a good conscience were major obstacles to political advancement Mobutu demanded absolute personal allegiance in return for the opportunity to accumulate wealth 43 As early as 1970 it was estimated that Mobutu had stolen 60 of the national budget that year marking him as one of the most corrupt leaders in Africa and the world 43 Kisangani wrote that Mobutu created a system of institutional corruption that greatly debased public morality by rewarding venality and greed 44 In 1972 Mobutu tried unsuccessfully to have himself named president for life 45 In June 1983 he raised himself to the rank of Field Marshal 46 the order was signed by General Likulia Bolongo Victor Nendaka Bika in his capacity as Vice President of the Bureau of the Central Committee second authority in the land addressed a speech filled with praise for President Mobutu Mobutu Sese Seko in army fatigues 1978 To gain the revenues of Congolese resources Mobutu initially nationalized foreign owned firms and forced European investors out of the country But in many cases he handed the management of these firms to relatives and close associates who quickly exercised their own corruption and stole the companies assets In 1973 1974 Mobutu launched his Zairianization campaign nationalising foreign owned businesses that were handed over to Zairians 32 In October 1973 the Arab oil shock ended the long summer of prosperity in the West that had begun in 1945 and send the world economy into its sharpest contraction since the Great Depression One consequence of the oil shock and the resulting global recession was that the price of copper dropped by 50 over the course of 1974 which proved to be a disaster for Zaire as copper was its most important export 32 The American historian Thomas Odom wrote because of the collapse in copper prices Zaire went from prosperity to bankruptcy almost overnight in 1974 32 The economic collapse forced Zaire to turn towards the International Monetary Fund IMF to help its manage its debts which could no longer be serviced 32 Seeking an alternative source of support as the auditors for the IMF discovered major corruption within the Zairian finances Mobutu visited China in 1974 and returned wearing a Mao jacket and the new title of Citoyen Mobutu Citizen Mobutu 47 Influenced by the Cultural Revolution Mobutu shifted to the left and announced his intention to radicalize the Zairian revolution 47 The businesses that Mobutu had just handed over to Zairians were in turn nationalized and placed under state control 47 At the same time Mobutu imposed a 50 salary cut to state employees which led a failed coup attempt against him in June 1975 47 By 1977 Mobutu s nationalizations had precipitated such an economic slump that Mobutu was forced to try to woo foreign investors back 48 Katangan rebels based in Angola invaded Zaire that year in retaliation for Mobutu s support for anti MPLA rebels France airlifted 1 500 Moroccan paratroopers into the country and repulsed the rebels ending Shaba I The rebels attacked Zaire again in greater numbers in the Shaba II invasion of 1978 The governments of Belgium and France deployed troops with logistical support from the United States and defeated the rebels again The poor performance of the Zairian Army during the both Shaba invasions which humiliated Mobutu by forcing him to ask for foreign troops did not lead to military reforms 49 However Mobutu reduced the size of the Army from 51 000 troops in 1978 down to 23 000 troops in 1980 49 By 1980 it was estimated that about 90 of the Zairian Army were Ngbandi as Mobutu did not trust the other peoples of Zaire to serve in the Army 49 The most loyal and best of Mobutu s units were his bodyguards the Israeli trained Division Speciale Presidentille that was made up exclusively of Ngbandi and was always commanded by one of Mobutu s relatives 50 Mobutu was re elected in single candidate elections in 1977 and 1984 He spent most of his time increasing his personal fortune which in 1984 was estimated to amount to US 5 billion 51 52 He held most of it out of the country in Swiss banks however a comparatively small 3 4 million was declared found in Swiss banks after he was ousted 53 This was almost equivalent to the amount of the country s foreign debt at the time In a speech that he delivered on 20 May 1976 in a football stadium in Kinshasa that was filled with some 70 000 people Mobutu openly accepted petty corruption stating If you want to steal steal a little in a nice way but if you steal too much to become rich overnight you will be caught 54 By 1989 the government was forced to default on international loans from Belgium Mobutu owned a fleet of Mercedes Benz vehicles that he used to travel between his numerous palaces while the nation s roads deteriorated and many of his people starved The infrastructure virtually collapsed and many public service workers went months without being paid Most of the money was siphoned off to Mobutu his family and top political and military leaders Only the Special Presidential Division on whom his physical safety depended was paid adequately or regularly A popular saying that the civil servants pretended to work while the state pretended to pay them expressed this grim reality 55 The Forces Armees Zairoises FAZ suffered from low morale made worse by irregular salaries dismal living conditions shortages of supplies and a venal officer corps 56 The soldiers of the FAZ behaved very much like a brutal occupying force who supported themselves by robbing the civilian population of Zaire 56 A recurring feature of Mobutu s rule were the seemingly endless number of roadblocks put by the FAZ who extorted money from the drivers of any passing automobile or lorries 56 Another feature of Mobutu s economic mismanagement directly linked to the way he and his friends siphoned off so much of the country s wealth was rampant inflation The rapid decline in the real value of salaries strongly encouraged a culture of corruption and dishonesty among public servants of all kinds Mobutu was known for his opulent lifestyle He cruised on the Congo on his yacht Kamanyola In Gbadolite he erected a palace the Versailles of the jungle 57 For shopping trips to Paris he would charter a Concorde from Air France he had the Gbadolite Airport constructed with a runway long enough to accommodate the Concorde s extended take off and landing requirements 58 In 1989 Mobutu chartered Concorde aircraft F BTSD for a 26 June 5 July trip to give a speech at the United Nations in New York City then again on 16 July for French bicentennial celebrations in Paris where he was a guest of President Francois Mitterrand and on 19 September for a flight from Paris to Gbadolite and another nonstop flight from Gbadolite to Marseille with the youth choir of Zaire 59 Mobutu s rule earned a reputation as one of the world s foremost examples of kleptocracy and nepotism 60 Close relatives and fellow members of the Ngbandi tribe were awarded high positions in the military and government and he groomed his eldest son Nyiwa to succeed him as president 61 however Nyiwa died from AIDS in 1994 62 Mobutu led one of the most enduring dictatorships in Africa and amassed a personal fortune estimated to be over US 5 billion by selling his nation s rich natural resources while the people lived in poverty 63 While in office he formed a totalitarian regime responsible for numerous human rights violations attempted to purge the country of all Belgian cultural influences and maintained an anti communist stance to gain positive international support 30 64 10 Makuta coin depicting Mobutu Sese Seko Mobutu was the subject of one of the most pervasive personality cults of the twentieth century The evening newscast opened with an image of him descending through clouds like a god His portraits were hung in many public places and government officials wore lapel pins bearing his portrait He held such titles as Father of the Nation Messiah Guide of the Revolution Helmsman Founder Savior of the People and Supreme Combatant In the 1996 documentary of the 1974 Foreman Ali fight in Zaire dancers receiving the fighters can be heard chanting Sese Seko Sese Seko At one point in early 1975 the media were forbidden to refer to anyone other than Mobutu by name others were referred to only by the positions they held 65 66 Mobutu successfully capitalized on Cold War tensions among European nations and the United States He gained significant support from the West and its international organizations such as the International Monetary Fund 67 Foreign policy Edit Main article Foreign policy of the Mobutu Sese Seko administration Relations with Belgium Edit Relations between Zaire and Belgium wavered between close intimacy and open hostility during the Mobutu years More often than not Belgian decision makers responded in a lackluster way when Mobutu acted against the interests of Belgium partly explained by the highly divided Belgian political class 68 Relations soured early in Mobutu s rule over disputes involving the substantial Belgian commercial and industrial holdings in the country but they warmed soon afterwards Mobutu and his family were received as personal guests of the Belgian monarch in 1968 and a convention for scientific and technical cooperation was signed that same year During King Baudouin s highly successful visit to Kinshasa in 1970 a treaty of friendship and cooperation between the two countries was signed However Mobutu tore up the treaty in 1974 in protest at Belgium s refusal to ban an anti Mobutu book written by left wing lawyer Jules Chome 69 Mobutu s Zairianisation policy which expropriated foreign held businesses and transferred their ownership to Zairians added to the strain 70 Mobutu maintained several personal contacts with prominent Belgians Edmond Leburton Belgian prime minister between 1973 and 1974 was someone greatly admired by the President 71 Alfred Cahen career diplomat and chef de cabinet of minister Henri Simonet became a personal friend of Mobutu when he was a student at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles 72 Relations with King Baudouin were mostly cordial until Mobutu released a bold statement about the Belgian royal family Prime Minister Wilfried Martens recalled in his memoirs that the palace gates closed completely after Mobutu published a handwritten letter of the King 73 Next to friendly ties with Belgians residing in Belgium Mobutu had a number of Belgian advisors at his disposal Some of them such as Hugues Leclercq and Colonel Willy Mallants were interviewed in Thierry Michel s documentary Mobutu King of Zaire Relations with France Edit As what was then the second most populous French speaking country in the world it has subsequently come to have a larger population than France and the most populous one in sub Saharan Africa 74 Zaire was of great strategic interest to France 75 During the First Republic era France tended to side with the conservative and federalist forces as opposed to unitarists such as Lumumba 74 Shortly after the Katangan secession was successfully crushed Zaire then called the Republic of the Congo signed a treaty of technical and cultural cooperation with France During the presidency of Charles de Gaulle relations with the two countries gradually grew stronger and closer In 1971 Finance Minister Valery Giscard d Estaing paid a visit to Zaire later after becoming president he would develop a close personal relationship with President Mobutu and became one of the regime s closest foreign allies During the Shaba invasions France sided firmly with Mobutu during the first Shaba invasion France airlifted 1 500 Moroccan troops to Zaire and the rebels were repulsed 76 a year later during the second Shaba invasion France itself along with Belgium would send French Foreign Legion paratroopers 2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment to aid Mobutu 77 78 79 Relations with the People s Republic of China Edit Initially Zaire s relationship with the People s Republic of China was no better than its relationship with the Soviet Union Memories of Chinese aid to Mulele and other Maoist rebels in Kwilu province during the ill fated Simba Rebellion remained fresh on Mobutu s mind He also opposed seating the PRC at the United Nations However by 1972 he began to see the Chinese in a different light as a counterbalance to both the Soviet Union as well as his intimate ties with the United States Israel and South Africa 80 81 In November 1972 Mobutu extended diplomatic recognition to the Chinese as well as East Germany and North Korea The following year Mobutu paid a visit to Beijing where he met with chairman Mao Zedong and received promises of 100 million in technical aid In 1974 Mobutu made a surprise visit to both China and North Korea during the time he was originally scheduled to visit the Soviet Union Upon returning home both his politics and rhetoric became markedly more radical it was around this time that Mobutu began criticizing Belgium and the United States the latter for not doing enough in Mobutu s opinion to combat white minority rule in South Africa and Rhodesia introduced the obligatory civic work program called salongo and initiated radicalization an extension of 1973 s Zairianization policy Mobutu even borrowed a title the Helmsman from Mao Incidentally late 1974 to early 1975 was when his personality cult reached its peak China and Zaire shared a common goal in central Africa namely doing everything in their power to halt Soviet gains in the area Accordingly both Zaire and China covertly funneled aid to the National Liberation Front of Angola and later the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola in order to prevent their former allies the People s Movement for the Liberation of Angola who were supported and augmented by Cuban forces from coming to power The Cubans who exercised considerable influence in Africa in support of leftist and anti imperialist forces were heavily sponsored by the Soviet Union during the period In addition to inviting Holden Roberto the leader of the National Liberation Front of Angola and his guerrillas to Beijing for training China provided weapons and money to the rebels Zaire itself launched an ill fated pre emptive invasion of Angola in a bid to install a pro Kinshasa government but was repulsed by Cuban troops The expedition was a fiasco with far reaching repercussions most notably the Shaba I and Shaba II invasions both of which China opposed China sent military aid to Zaire during both invasions and accused the Soviet Union and Cuba who were alleged to have supported the Shaban rebels although this was and remains speculation of working to de stabilize central Africa Relations with the Soviet Union Edit Mobutu s relationship with the Soviet Union was frosty and tense A staunch anti communist he was not anxious to recognize the Soviets the USSR had supported though mostly in words both Patrice Lumumba Mobutu s democratically elected predecessor and the Simba rebellion However to project a non aligned image he did renew ties in 1967 the first Soviet ambassador arrived and presented his credentials in 1968 82 Mobutu did however join the United States in condemning the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia that year 83 Mobutu viewed the Soviet presence as advantageous for two reasons it allowed him to maintain an image of non alignment and it provided a convenient scapegoat for problems at home For example in 1970 he expelled four Soviet diplomats for carrying out subversive activities and in 1971 twenty Soviet officials were declared persona non grata for allegedly instigating student demonstrations at Lovanium University 84 Moscow was the only major world capital Mobutu never visited although he did accept an invitation to do so in 1974 For reasons unknown he cancelled the visit at the last minute and toured the People s Republic of China and North Korea instead 85 Relations cooled further in 1975 when the two countries found themselves on opposing sides in the Angolan Civil War This had a dramatic effect on Zairian foreign policy for the next decade bereft of his claim to African leadership Mobutu was one of the few leaders who refused to recognize the Marxist government of Angola Mobutu turned increasingly to the US and its allies adopting pro American stances on such issues as the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and Israel s position in international organizations Relations with the United States Edit Mobutu Sese Seko and Richard Nixon in Washington D C October 1973 Mobutu Sese Seko and U S President George H W Bush in Washington D C 1989 For the most part Zaire enjoyed warm relations with the United States The United States was the third largest donor of aid to Zaire after Belgium and France and Mobutu befriended several US presidents including Richard Nixon Ronald Reagan and George H W Bush Relations did cool significantly in 1974 1975 over Mobutu s increasingly radical rhetoric which included his scathing denunciations of American foreign policy 86 and plummeted to an all time low in the summer of 1975 when Mobutu accused the Central Intelligence Agency of plotting his overthrow and arrested eleven senior Zairian generals and several civilians and condemned in absentia a former head of the Central Bank Albert Ndele 86 However many people viewed these charges with skepticism in fact one of Mobutu s staunchest critics Nzongola Ntalaja speculated that Mobutu invented the plot as an excuse to purge the military of talented officers who might otherwise pose a threat to his rule 87 In spite of these hindrances the chilly relationship quickly thawed when both countries found each other supporting the same side during the Angolan Civil War Because of Mobutu s poor human rights record the Carter Administration put some distance between itself and the Kinshasa government 88 even so Zaire received nearly half the foreign aid Carter allocated to sub Saharan Africa 89 During the first Shaba invasion the United States played a relatively inconsequential role its belated intervention consisted of little more than the delivery of non lethal supplies But during the second Shaba invasion the US played a much more active and decisive role by providing transportation and logistical support to the French and Belgian paratroopers that were deployed to aid Mobutu against the rebels Carter echoed Mobutu s unsubstantiated charges of Soviet and Cuban aid to the rebels until it was apparent that no hard evidence existed to verify his claims 90 In 1980 the US House of Representatives voted to terminate military aid to Zaire but the US Senate reinstated the funds in response to pressure from Carter and American business interests in Zaire 91 Mobutu enjoyed a very warm relationship with the Reagan Administration through financial donations During Reagan s presidency Mobutu visited the White House three times and criticism of Zaire s human rights record by the US was effectively muted During a state visit by Mobutu in 1983 Reagan praised the Zairian strongman as a voice of good sense and goodwill 92 Mobutu also had a cordial relationship with Reagan s successor George H W Bush he was the first African head of state to visit Bush at the White House 93 Even so Mobutu s relationship with the US radically changed shortly afterward with the end of the Cold War With the Soviet Union gone there was no longer any reason to support Mobutu as a bulwark against communism Accordingly the US and other Western powers began pressuring Mobutu to democratize the regime Regarding the change in US attitude to his regime Mobutu bitterly remarked I am the latest victim of the cold war no longer needed by the US The lesson is that my support for American policy counts for nothing 94 In 1993 Mobutu was denied a visa by the US State Department after he sought to visit Washington D C Mobutu also had friends in America outside Washington Mobutu was befriended by televangelist Pat Robertson who promised to try to get the State Department to lift its ban on the African leader 95 Coalition government Edit Gui Polspoel with Frederic Francois and Mobutu in Gbadolite 1992 In May 1990 due to the ending of the Cold War and a change in the international political climate as well as economic problems and domestic unrest Mobutu agreed to give up the MPR s monopoly of power In early May 1990 students studying at the Lubumbashi campus of the National University of Zaire protested against Mobutu s regime demanding his resignation 96 On the night of 11 May 1990 electricity was cut off to the campus while a special military unit called Les Hiboux The Owls were sent in armed with machetes and bayonets 96 By the dawn of 12 May 1990 at least 290 students had been killed 96 The massacre led to the nations of the European Economic Community now the European Union the United States and Canada to end all non humanitarian aid to Zaire which marked the beginning of the end of Western support for Mobutu 96 Mobutu appointed a transitional government that would lead to promised elections but he retained substantial powers Following the 1991 riots in Kinshasa by unpaid soldiers Mobutu brought opposition figures into a coalition government but still connived to retain control of the security services and important ministries Factional divisions led to the creation of two governments in 1993 one pro and one anti Mobutu The anti Mobutu government was headed by Laurent Monsengwo and Etienne Tshisekedi of the Union for Democracy and Social Progress UDPS The economic situation was still dismal and in 1994 the two groups merged into the High Council of Republic Parliament of Transition HCR PT Mobutu appointed Kengo Wa Dondo an advocate of austerity and free market reforms as prime minister During this period Mobutu was becoming increasingly physically frail and during one of his trips to Europe for medical treatment ethnic Tutsis captured much of eastern Zaire Overthrow EditThe seeds of Mobutu s downfall were sown in the Rwandan Genocide when about 800 000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were massacred by about 200 000 Hutu extremists aided by the Rwandan government in 1994 The genocide ended when the Tutsi dominated Rwandan Patriotic Front seized the whole country leading hundreds of thousands of Hutus including many of the genocidal killers to flee into refugee camps in eastern Zaire Mobutu welcomed the Hutu extremists as personal guests and allowed them to establish military and political bases in the eastern territories from where they attacked and killed ethnic Tutsis across the border in Rwanda and in Zaire itself ostensibly to prepare for a renewed offensive back into Rwanda The new Rwandan government began sending military aid to the Zairian Tutsis in response The resulting conflict began to destabilize eastern Zaire as a whole When Mobutu s government issued an order in November 1996 forcing Tutsis to leave Zaire on penalty of death the ethnic Tutsis in Zaire 97 known as Banyamulenge were the focal point of a rebellion From eastern Zaire the rebels aided by foreign government forces under the leadership of President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda and Rwandan Minister of Defense Paul Kagame launched an offensive to overthrow Mobutu joining forces with locals opposed to him under Laurent Desire Kabila as they marched west toward Kinshasa Burundi and Angola also supported the growing rebellion which mushroomed into the First Congo War Ailing with cancer Mobutu was in Switzerland for treatment 98 and he was unable to coordinate the resistance which crumbled in front of the march The rebel forces would have completely overrun the country far sooner than it ultimately did if not for the country s decrepit infrastructure In most areas no paved roads existed the only vehicle paths were irregularly used dirt roads By mid 1997 Kabila s forces resumed their advance and the remains of Mobutu s army offered almost no resistance On 16 May 1997 following failed peace talks held in Pointe Noire on board the South African Navy ship SAS Outeniqua with Kabila and President of South Africa Nelson Mandela who chaired the talks Mobutu fled into exile Kabila s forces known as the Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo Zaire AFDL proclaimed victory the next day On 23 May 1997 Zaire was renamed the Democratic Republic of the Congo 99 Exile and death EditMobutu went into temporary exile in Togo until President Gnassingbe Eyadema insisted that Mobutu leave the country a few days later 100 From 23 May 1997 he lived mostly in Rabat Morocco 101 He died there on 7 September 1997 from prostate cancer at the age of 66 He is interred in an above ground mausoleum at Rabat in the Christian cemetery known as Cimetiere Europeen In December 2007 the National Assembly of the Democratic Republic of the Congo recommended returning his remains and interring them in a mausoleum in the DRC which has not yet taken place Mobutu remains interred in Morocco 102 Family EditMobutu was married twice He married his first wife Marie Antoinette Gbiatibwa Gogbe Yetene in 1955 103 They had nine children She died of heart failure on 22 October 1977 in Genolier Switzerland at the age of 36 On 1 May 1980 he married his mistress Bobi Ladawa on the eve of a visit by Pope John Paul II thus legitimizing his relationship in the eyes of the Church Two of his sons from his first marriage died during his lifetime Jean Paul Nyiwa d 16 September 1994 and Konga d 1992 Two more died in the years following his death Kongulu d 24 September 1998 and Manda d 27 November 2004 62 His elder son from his second marriage Nzanga Mobutu Ngbangawe now when the head of the family was a candidate in the 2006 presidential elections and later served in the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo as Minister of State for Agriculture A daughter Yakpwa nicknamed Yaki was briefly married to a Belgian Pierre Janssen who later wrote a book 104 that described Mobutu s lifestyle in vivid detail Altogether Mobutu had at least twenty one children 105 With Marie Antoinette first wife Nyiwa Ngombo Manda Konga Ngawali Yango Yakpwa Kongulu Ndagbia 9 With Bobi Ladawa second wife Nzanga Giala Toku Ndokula 4 With Kosia Ladawa mistress and twin sister of his second wife Ya Litho Tende Sengboni 3 With Mama 41 Senghor Dongo Nzanga 3 With Mbanguula A son 1 With an unknown woman from Brazzaville Robert 1 On trips across Zaire he appropriated the droit de cuissage right to deflower as local chiefs offered him virgins this practice was considered an honor for the virgin s family 106 In art and literature EditMobutu was the subject of the three part 1999 Belgian documentary Mobutu King of Zaire by Thierry Michel Mobutu was also featured in the 2000 feature film Lumumba directed by Raoul Peck which detailed the pre coup and coup years from the perspective of Lumumba Mobutu also featured in the 1996 American documentary When We Were Kings which centred around the famed Rumble in the Jungle boxing bout between George Foreman and Muhammad Ali for the 1974 heavyweight championship of the world which took place in Kinshasa during Mobutu s rule In the 1978 war adventure film The Wild Geese the villain General Ndofa described in the film as an extremely corrupt leader of a copper rich nation in central Africa was a thinly disguised version of Mobutu 107 Mobutu also might be considered as the inspiration behind some of the characters in the works of the poetry of Wole Soyinka the novel A Bend in the River by V S Naipaul and Anthills of the Savannah by Chinua Achebe William Close father of actress Glenn Close was once a personal physician to Mobutu and wrote a book focusing on his service in Zaire Barbara Kingsolver s 1998 historical novel The Poisonwood Bible depicts the events of the Congo Crisis from a fictional standpoint featuring the role of Mobutu in the crisis Mobutu was played by the Belgian actor Marc Zinga in the 2011 film Mister Bob The French critic Isabelle Hanne praised Zinga s performance as Mobutu writing he brilliantly embodies this Shakespearian and bloodthirsty figure 108 Mobutu was included as an additional promotional card in the card driven strategy game Twilight Struggle His card when played increases the stability of the country then known as Zaire and increases the influence of the United States over the African nation Legacy Edit Mobutu s palace in his hometown of Gbadolite ransacked after he was deposed and exiled Photographed c 2010 According to Mobutu s New York Times obituary He built his political longevity on three pillars violence cunning and the use of state funds to buy off enemies His systematic looting of the national treasury and major industries gave birth to the term kleptocracy to describe a rule of official corruption that reputedly made him one of the world s wealthiest heads of state 109 In 2011 Time magazine described him as the archetypal African dictator 8 Mobutu was infamous for embezzling the equivalent of billions of US dollars from his country According to the most conservative estimates he stole US 4 5 billion from his country and some sources put the figure as high as US 15 billion According to Pierre Janssen the ex husband of Mobutu s daughter Yaki Mobutu had no concern for the cost of the expensive gifts he gave away to his cronies Janssen married Yaki in a lavish ceremony that included three orchestras a US 65 000 wedding cake and a giant fireworks display Yaki wore a US 70 000 wedding gown and US 3 million worth of jewels Janssen wrote a book describing Mobutu s daily routine which included several daily bottles of wine retainers flown in from overseas and lavish meals 66 According to Transparency International Mobutu embezzled over US 5 billion from his country ranking him as the third most corrupt leader since 1984 and the most corrupt African leader during the same period 110 Philip Gourevitch in We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families 1998 wrote Mobutu had really staged a funeral for a generation of African leadership of which he the Dinosaur as he had long been known was the paragon the client dictator of Cold War neocolonialism monomaniacal perfectly corrupt and absolutely ruinous to his nation Mobutu was instrumental in bringing the Rumble in the Jungle boxing match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman to Zaire on 30 October 1974 According to the documentary When We Were Kings promoter Don King promised each fighter five million dollars U S for the fight To this end King offered the bout to any African country that put up the money to host it in exchange for recognition Mobutu was willing to fund the ten million dollar purse and host the bout in order to gain international recognition and legitimacy in the process Mobutu gained Zaire and its people considerable publicity in the weeks even before the televised bout as worldwide attention focused on his country According to a quote in the film Ali supposedly said Some countries go to war to get their names out there and wars cost a lot more than ten million dollars On 22 September 1974 Mobutu presented the rebuilt 20 May Stadium a multi million dollar sports project constructed to host the Ali Foreman boxing card to the Zaire Ministry of Youth and Sport and to the people of Zaire 111 Explanatory notes Edit The name translates as the warrior who goes from conquest to conquest leaving fire in his path the warrior who leaves a trail of fire in his path or the warrior who knows no defeat because of his endurance and inflexible will and is all powerful leaving fire in his wake as he goes from conquest to conquest References EditCitations Edit Crawford Young Thomas Edwin Turner The Rise and Decline of the Zairian State p 210 1985 University of Wisconsin Press Vieira Daviel Lazure Precolonial Imaginaries and Colonial Legacies in Mobutu s Authentic Zaire in Exploitation and Misrule in Colonial and Postcolonial Africa edited by Kalu Kenneth and Falola Toyin pp 165 191 Palgrave Macmillan 2019 David F Schmitz The United States and Right Wing Dictatorships 1965 1989 pp 9 36 2006 Cambridge University Press Mobutu Sese Seko The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Columbia University Press 2012 Retrieved 30 April 2013 Acemoglu Daron Robinson James A amp Verdier Thierry April May 2004 Kleptocracy and Divide and Rule A Model of Personal Rule Journal of the European Economic Association 2 2 3 162 192 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 687 1751 doi 10 1162 154247604323067916 S2CID 7846928 Archived from the original on 29 December 2014 Retrieved 26 October 2013 Pearce Justin 16 January 2001 DR Congo s troubled history BBC Jung Chang and Jon Halliday Mao the Unknown Story p 574 2006 edition Anchor Books a b Tharoor Ishaan 20 October 2011 Mobutu Sese Seko Top 15 Toppled Dictators Time Magazine Archived from the original on 22 October 2011 Retrieved 30 April 2013 Chronology for Ngbandi in the Dem Rep of the Congo United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees 15 May 2013 Akrasih Shirley 28 February 2012 AFRICA AND DEMOCRACY Joseph Mobutu Dictator of the DRC and His Life Saving Support from the US Davidson College Archived from the original on 3 March 2014 Robert Edgerton 2002 The Troubled Heart of Africa A History of the Congo Macmillan ISBN 978 0312304867 Wrong Michela 2009 In the Footsteps of Mr Kurtz Living on the Brink of Disaster in Mobutu s Congo HarperCollins ISBN 0061863610 pp 70 72 Wrong pp 72 74 Wrong pp 74 75 Wrong p 75 Crawford Young and Thomas Turner The Rise and Decline of the Zairian State p 175 Wrong pp 76 Wrong p 67 Kanza 1994 p 113 Hoskyns 1965 pp 88 89 Kanza 1994 p 191 a b Kanza 1994 p 192 Kanza 1994 p 193 Hoskyns 1965 pp 92 94 a b c Urquhart Brian 13 February 2019 Character Sketches Mobutu and Tshombe Two Conoglese Rogues United Nations Retrieved 24 April 2022 Schmidt Elizabeth Foreign Intervention in Africa Cambridge UP pp 62 65 De Witte Ludo Wright Ann 2002 The Assassination of Lumumba Verso Books p 127 ISBN 978 1 85984 410 6 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Lemarchand Rene December 1990 Mobutu s Second Coming In Meditz Sandra W Merrill Tim eds Zaire A country study Federal Research Division Library of Congress This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Turner Thomas December 1990 The Party State as a System of Rule In Meditz Sandra W Merrill Tim eds Zaire A country study Federal Research Division Library of Congress a b French Howard W 17 May 1997 Anatomy of an Autocracy Mobutu s 32 Year Reign The New York Times on the Web Retrieved 5 July 2012 Parliament Stripped of All Power by Mobutu Congo Chief Expected to Decree Budget Ratification and Reduce Provinces to 14 The Los Angeles Times Associated Press 23 March 1966 p 18 a b c d e f g h Odom 1993 p 10 Anthony Mockler The New Mercenaries Corgi Books 1985 ISBN 0 552 12558 X Callaghy Thomas M The State Society Struggle Zaire in Comparative Perspective p 164 DRC Elections under the Second Republic Archived 2 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine EISA Nohlen D Krennerich M amp Thibaut B 1999 Elections in Africa A data handbook p294 ISBN 0 19 829645 2 Shaw 2005 63 Zaire Continuity and Political Change in an Oppressive State Winsome J Leslie Westview Press 1993 page 60 Other translations of his name include the all powerful warrior who because of his endurance and inflexible will to win will go from conquest to conquest leaving fire in his wake the earthy the peppery all powerful warrior who by his endurance and will to win goes from contest to contest leaving fire in his wake and the man who flies from victory to victory and leaves nothing behind him lt http www plexoft com SBF N04 html Sese gt and the all powerful warrior who goes from conquest to conquest leaving fire in his wake Wrong p 4 Young and Turner p 57 Wrong Michela 2002 In The Footsteps of Mr Kurtz Living on the Brink of Disaster in Mobutu s Congo Perennial ISBN 0 06 093443 3 p 90 Influential Africans Mobutu Sese Seko Voice of America 31 October 2009 a b c d e f Kisangani 2016 p 356 Kisangani 2016 p 355 356 Young and Turner p 211 Mobutu grants amnesty to political prisoners in Zaire UPI a b c d Odom 1993 p 11 BBC Timeline Democratic Republic of Congo BBC News 11 March 2014 Retrieved on 23 April 2014 a b c Kisangani 2016 p 424 Kisangani 2016 p 425 Fortune 12 October 1987 p 189 60 Minutes 4 March 1984 Swiss banks find only 3 4 million in Mobutu assets CNN 3 June 1997 Kisangani 2016 p 355 BBC News AFRICA Mobutu s legacy Show over substance news bbc co uk Retrieved 7 July 2018 a b c Young amp Turner 1985 p 259 Robert Block 14 February 1993 Mobutu goes cruising as his country burns The cook s son is feeding Zaire to the crocodiles Robert Block on an unpopular survivor The Independent Archived from the original on 15 May 2022 Retrieved 28 March 2015 Shaw 2005 47 58 Concorde supersonique jet Gallery Pictures Archived 3 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine Concorde jet com 30 September 1989 Retrieved on 23 April 2014 Plundering politicians and bribing multinationals undermine international development says TI PDF Transparency International 25 March 2004 Archived from the original PDF on 3 September 2010 Retrieved 5 July 2012 Zaire A Country Study Establishment of a Personalistic Regime Lcweb2 loc gov Retrieved on 23 April 2014 a b RDC La mort prematuree de Manda Mobutu met un point final a l histoire du Zaire Archived from the original on 1 November 2005 Retrieved 1 November 2005 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Le Faso 24 December 2004 Mobutu dies in exile in Morocco CNN World 7 September 1997 Archived from the original on 20 May 2012 Retrieved 5 July 2012 Collins Carole J L 1 July 1997 Zaire Democratic Republic of the Congo Institute for Policy Studies Retrieved 5 July 2012 Young and Turner p 169 a b Edgerton Robert The Troubled Heart of Africa A History of the Congo St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 30486 2 Department of State Background Notes Congo Kinshasa Foreign Relations State gov Retrieved on 23 April 2014 Hendrickx Colin 2019 Belgium and Mobutu s Zaire Analysis of an Eventful Era PDF Journal of Belgian History XLIX 1 102 103 Retrieved 14 November 2020 Young and Turner p 172 Matti Stephanie 2010 Resources and Rent Seeking in the Democratic Republic of Congo Third World Quarterly 31 3 401 413 doi 10 1080 01436597 2010 488471 S2CID 154599459 de Villers Gauthier 1995 De Mobutu a Mobutu trente ans de relations Belgique Zaire De Boeck Universite ISSN 1370 0715 p 49 Lanotte Olivier et al 2000 La Belgique et l Afrique Centrale De 1960 a nos jours Editions Complexe ISBN 2 87027 831 4 p 133 Martens Wilfried 2006 De memoires luctor et emergo Lannoo ISBN 9789020965209 p 513 a b Zaire A Country Study Relations with France Lcweb2 loc gov Retrieved on 23 April 2014 Meredith Martin 2005 The Fate of Africa From the Hopes of Freedom to the Heart of Despair PublicAffairs ISBN 1 58648 246 7 p 525 Zaire A Country Study Shaba I Lcweb2 loc gov 8 March 1977 Retrieved on 23 April 2014 Zaire A Country Study Shaba II Lcweb2 loc gov Retrieved on 23 April 2014 Shaba II The French and Belgian Intervention in Zaire in 1978 Archived 9 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine by Lieutenant Colonel Thomas P Odom Sauvetage de Kolwezi Callagy Thomas M 1983 South Africa in Southern Africa The Intensifying Vortex of Violence Praeger ISBN 0030603064 Leslie Winsome J 1993 Zaire in the International Arena in Zaire Continuity and Political Change in an Oppressive State Westview Press ISBN 0 86531 298 2 Kasuka B 2012 Prominent African Leaders Since Independence CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 180 ISBN 978 1 4700 4358 2 Retrieved 17 February 2018 Michael G Schatzberg 1991 Mobutu or chaos the United States and Zaire 1960 1990 University Press of America p 64 ISBN 978 0 8191 8130 5 Emizet Francois Kisangani 18 November 2016 Historical Dictionary of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 538 ISBN 978 1 4422 7316 0 Bridgette Kasuka 8 February 2012 Prominent African Leaders Since Independence Bankole Kamara Taylor pp 181 ISBN 978 1 4700 4358 2 a b Young and Turner p 372 Elliot and Dymally p 150 Zaire A Country Study Relations with the United States Lcweb2 loc gov 30 November 1973 Retrieved on 23 April 2014 Lamb David 1987 The Africans Vintage ISBN 0394753089 p 46 Young and Turner p 389 Elliot and Dymally p 88 When He Was King On the trail of Marshal Mobutu Sese Seko Zaire s former Kleptocrat in Chief Metroactive 24 April 1990 Retrieved on 23 April 2014 Zaire s Mobutu Visits America by Michael Johns Heritage Foundation Executive Memorandum 239 29 June 1989 Archived 21 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine Heritage org Retrieved on 23 April 2014 Zagorin Adam 24 June 2001 Leaving Fire in His Wake Time Retrieved on 23 April 2014 Mobutu said to have powerful US friends New York Amsterdam News 24 May 1997 Archived 17 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Kisangani 2016 p 401 Atzili Boaz 2012 Good Fences Bad Neighbors Border Fixity and International Conflict University Of Chicago Press ISBN 0226031365 p 188 Dipiazza Francesca Davis 2007 Democratic Republic of Congo in Pictures Twenty First Century Books ISBN 0822585723 p 35 Dickovick J Tyler 2008 The World Today Series Africa 2012 Lanham Maryland Stryker Post Publications ISBN 978 1610488815 Togo prods Mobutu to move on but to where AP NEWS Refugees United Nations High Commissioner for Refworld Zaire Information on events that occurred between 16 and 24 May 1997 including the rebel takeover Refworld RD Congo Pour le rapatriement des restes de Mobutu Panapress 17 December 2007 in French Destins de famille s Jeune Afrique JeuneAfrique com in French 10 September 2007 Retrieved 24 February 2021 Janssen Pierre 1997 A la cour de Mobutu Michel Lafon ISBN 2 84098 332 X Enfants de Mobutu Mobutu s Children Jeune Afrique 10 September 2007 Retrieved on 21 May 2016 David van Reybrouck 25 March 2014 Congo The Epic History of a People HarperCollins 2012 p 384f ISBN 978 0 06 220011 2 Burke 2018 p 110 Hanne Isabelle 3 October 2011 Mister Bob pantin au Congo Liberation Retrieved 17 April 2022 The World s Most Notorious Dictators Athlon Special Issue 2017 p 58 Suharto Marcos and Mobutu head corruption table with 50bn scams The Guardian 26 March 2004 Johnson Thomas A 23 September 1974 100 000 Cheers Greet Mobutu Gift a Rebuilt Stadium The New York Times General and cited references EditBooks Edit English Edit Ayittey George B N Africa in Chaos A Comparative History Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 312 21787 0 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 Callaghy Thomas M Politics and Culture in Zaire Center for Political Studies ASIN B00071MTTW Callaghy Thomas M State Society Struggle Zaire in Comparative Perspective Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 05720 2 Close William T Beyond the Storm Treating the Powerless amp the Powerful in Mobutu s Congo Zaire Meadowlark Springs Production ISBN 0 9703371 4 0 De Witte Ludo The Assassination of Lumumba Verso ISBN 1 85984 410 3 Edgerton Robert The Troubled Heart of Africa A History of the Congo St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 30486 2 Elliot Jeffrey M and Mervyn M Dymally eds Voices of Zaire Rhetoric or Reality Washington Institute Press ISBN 0 88702 045 3 French Howard W A Continent for the Taking The Tragedy and Hope of Africa Vintage ISBN 1 4000 3027 7 Gerard Emmanuel and Kuklick Bruce Death in the Congo Murdering Patrice Lumumba 2015 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 72527 0 Gould David Bureaucratic Corruption and Underdevelopment in the Third World The Case of Zaire ASIN B0006E1JR8 Gran Guy and Galen Hull eds Zaire The Political Economy of Underdevelopment ISBN 0 275 90358 3 Harden Blaine Africa Dispatches from a Fragile Continent Houghton Mifflin Company ISBN 0 395 59746 3 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 Vermont Schenkman Books Inc ISBN 978 0 87073 901 9 Kelly Sean America s Tyrant The CIA and Mobutu of Zaire American University Press ISBN 1 879383 17 9 Kingsolver Barbara The Poisonwood Bible Harper Collins ISBN 0 606 19420 7 Kisangani Emizet F 2016 Historical Dictionary of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Latham Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 9781442273160 MacGaffey Janet ed The Real Economy of Zaire The Contribution of Smuggling and Other Unofficial Activities to National Wealth Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0 8122 1365 3 Meditz Sandra W and Tim Merrill Zaire A Country Study Claitor s Law Books and Publishing Division ISBN 1 57980 162 5 Mokoli Mondonga M State Against Development The Experience of Post 1965 Zaire New York Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 28213 7 Mwakikagile Godfrey Nyerere and Africa End of an Era 2006 Chapter Six Congo in The 1960s The Bleeding Heart of Africa New Africa Press South Africa ISBN 978 0 9802534 1 2 Mwakikagile Godfrey Africa is in A Mess What Went Wrong and What Should Be Done 2006 New Africa Press ISBN 978 0 9802534 7 4 Nzongola Ntalaja Georges The Congo From Leopold to Kabila A People s History Zed Books ISBN 1 84277 053 5 Odom Thomas Paul 1993 Shaba II The French and Belgian Intervention in Zaire in 1978 Fort Leavenworth U S Army Command and General Staff College Combat Studies Institute ISBN 9781839310973 Sandbrook Richard 1985 The Politics of Africa s Economic Stagnation Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 31961 7 Schatzberg Michael G The Dialectics of Oppression in Zaire Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 20694 4 Schatzberg Michael G Mobutu or Chaos University Press of America ISBN 0 8191 8130 7 Taylor Jeffrey Facing the Congo A Modern Day Journey into the Heart of Darkness Three Rivers Press 0609808265 Young Crawford Turner Thomas 1985 The Rise and Decline of the Zairian State Madison University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 9780299101138 French Edit Braeckman Colette Le Dinosaure le Zaire de Mobutu Fayard ISBN 2 213 02863 X Chome Jules L ascension de Mobutu Du sergent Desire Joseph au general Sese Seko F Maspero ISBN 2 7071 1075 2 Dungia Emmanuel Mobutu et l Argent du Zaire les revelations d un diplomate ex agent des Services secrets L Harmattan ISBN 2 7384 1133 9 ISBN 978 2 7384 1133 4 Mobutu Sese Seko Discours allocutions et messages 1965 1975 Editions J A ISBN 2 85258 022 5 Monheim Francis Mobutu l homme seul Editions Actuelles Unknown ISBN Ngbanda Nzambo ku Atumba Honore Ainsi sonne le glas Les Derniers Jours du Marechal Mobutu Gideppe ISBN 2 9512000 2 1 Nguza Karl i Bond Jean Mobutu ou l Incarnation du Mal Zairois Bellew Publishing Co Ltd ISBN 0 86036 197 7Other Edit Shaw Karl 2005 2004 Power Mad Silenstvi mocnych in Czech Praha Metafora ISBN 978 80 7359 002 4 External links EditMobutu Sese Seko at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata Speech by Mobutu vowing to resist the rebel onslaught and remain in power Obituary Anatomy of an Autocracy Mobutu s 32 Year Reign The New York Times biography by Howard W French Mobutu s legacy Show over substance Hope and retribution in Zaire Allan Little From Our Own Correspondent BBC News 24 May 1997 Zaire s Mobutu Visits America by Michael Johns Heritage Foundation Executive Memorandum 239 29 June 1989Political officesPreceded byJoseph Kasa VubuasPresident of the Republic of the Congo President of Zaire before 1971 President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo 24 November 1965 16 May 1997 Succeeded byLaurent Desire KabilaasPresident of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mobutu Sese Seko amp oldid 1137485688, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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