Dancing in the Glory of Monsters

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Dancing in the Glory of Monsters Page 44

by Jason Stearns


  45 As always, reliable statistics are hard to come by in the region. According to the United States Geological Survey, columbo-tantalite exports for 2000 amounted to 1,011 tons for Rwanda and the Congo combined, while a UN experts panel estimated exports to be around 1,200 tons for the same period. Rwanda has several, smaller coltan mines, but the bulk of their exports comes from the Eastern Congo. The local price in Goma peaked in the second half of 2000 at $75 per kilo of 20 to 40 percent coltan and $150 for higher-grade product. The world price, however, peaked at around $600 for refined tantalum, so middlemen had handsome profit margins. See George Coakley, The Mineral Industry of Congo-Kinshasa, U.S. Geological Survey Country Report, 2002, 10.3, www.usgs.gov.

  46 Stephan Marysse and C. Andre, “Guerre et pillage économique en République Democratique du Congo,” in L’Afrique des Grands Lacs; see also Bjorn Willum, “ Purely Beneficial or Contributing to War,” PhD diss., October 21, 2001, University of Copenhagen. Willum conducts a comprehensive analysis of gold, coltan, and diamond exports from the Eastern Congo and concludes that the Rwandan army and its business associates were making around $250 million in profits from mineral trade in the Eastern Congo at the height of the war.

  47 Report of the United Nations Panel, 27.

  48 International Institute for Security Studies, The Military Balance (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002).

  49 Author’s interview with Colonel Vincent Kitoko, Kinshasa, July 2008.

  50 Rwanda: The Search for Security and Human Rights Abuses, Human Rights Watch, vol. 12, no. 1(A), April 2000.

  51 Author’s interview with Patrick Karegeya, Dar es Salaam, January 2008.

  52 Final Report of the United Nations Panel of Experts on the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources and Other Forms of Wealth of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, S/2002/1146, United Nations, October 16, 2002, 15.

  53 World Bank: Doing Business 2009 (Washington: World Bank, 2008), 43.

  54 Final Report of the United Nations Panel; Report of the United Nations Panel; Cuvulier and Raeymaekers, Supporting the War Economy.

  55 Stewart, Corporate War Crimes, 34–36.

  CHAPTER 20

  1 Gaetan Kakudji was a longtime associate of Kabila, his representative in Belgium during the 1980s, and his interior minister once he came to power; Victor Mpoyo was minister of the state portfolio for several years and handled much of Kabila’s financial dealings.

  2 According to Edy Kapend, the following people attended this meeting: several of Laurent Kabila’s old comrades from his early days as a rebel, namely General Celestin Kifwa, General Sylvestre Lwetcha, General Francois Olenga, Victor Mpoyo, Gaetan Kakudji, and Yerodia Ndombasi; and members of the new vanguard, including Mwenze Kongolo, Didier Mumengi, Nono Lutula, and Henri Mova. Others say the group was smaller but did not include any other names.

  3 Author’s interview with anonymous presidential aide, Kinshasa, July 2009.

  4 Ibid.

  5 Danna Harman, “A Shy Son in Congo’s Hot Seat,” Christian Science Monitor, January 23, 2001.

  6 Jean Omasombo and Erik Kennes, Biographies des acteurs de la transition (Terveuren, Belgium: Musée Royale de l’Afrique Centrale, 2006), 70. Tanzanian security officials and numerous members of Joseph Kabila’s entourage have confirmed this.

  7 Author’s interviews conducted in Kinshasa in 2007–2009; interestingly, this version is also supported by Laurent Nkunda, who fought alongside Joseph Kabila—albeit as a junior officer—in the AFDL war.

  8 Erik Kennes with Jean Omasombo, Essai biographique sur Laurent Désiré Kabila (Paris: L’Harmattan, 2003), 300.

  9 Colette Braeckman, “ Mama Sifa, la mère du president parle,” Le Soir (Brussels), June 6, 2006 (my translation).

  10 Author’s interview with Kenyan security official, Nairobi, June 2009; “Portrait: Joseph Kabila,” La Revue (July/August 2006): 37.

  11 “Kabange” denotes the second born of twins in Laurent Kabila’s native language, Kiluba.

  12 Francois Soudan, “Portrait: Joseph Kabila,” La Revue (July/August 2006): 41.

  13 He had been nominally in charge of some military operations during the AFDL offensive, but according to soldiers serving under him at the time, he worked in the shadow of Rwandan commanders.

  14 Gérard Prunier, Africa’s World War: Congo, the Rwandan Genocide, and the Making of a Continental Catastrophe (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), 258.

  15 Ibid.

  16 Chris McGreal, “Western Allies Urge Rwanda to Leave Congo,” Guardian (Manchester, U.K.), February 9, 2001.

  17 “Congo Rebels Deny Clearance to U.N. Troops Trying to Land,” Associated Press, April 16, 2001.

  18 Prunier, Africa’s World War, 263.

  19 Author’s interview with UN official, Nairobi, June 2009.

  20 Author’s interview with American diplomat, Kinshasa, July 2009.

  21 Author’s interview with foreign journalist, Kinshasa, July 2008. The ambassador in question was Georges Serre.

  22 Author’s interview with UN official, Nairobi, June 2008.

  23 Author’s interview with Philip Winter, Kinshasa, June 2008.

  24 Netherlands Institute for Southern Africa (NIZA), The State vs. The People, 2006, , 41.

  25 Author’s interview with UN official, Nairobi, June 2008.

  26 Special Commission Charged with Examining the Validity of Economic and Financial Conventions Concluded During the Wars of 1996–1997 and 1998: The Lutundula Report, National Assembly of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, February 26, 2006, 63–64.

  27 Final Report of the United Nations Panel of Experts on the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources and Other Forms of Wealth of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, #S/2002/1146, United Nations, October 16, 2002, 7; Toby Heaps, “A Glimpse of the World: Joseph Kabila,” Tea with the FT, Financial Times (London), April 9, 2006.

  28 Brooderlink Delen, “Memorandum to the Attention of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Member States of the International Committee of Support for the Transition in the DRC,” Rights and Accountability in Development, 11.11.11, February 20, 2006, 8.

  29 “Office Memorandum from Craig Andrews, Principle Mining Specialist, to Pedro Alba, Country Director for the DRC,” September 4, 2005, in the author’s archive.

  30 Author’s interview with presidential advisor, Kinshasa, November 2007; author’s interview with presidential pilot, Kinshasa, June 2008; Gertler is also named in Report of the United Nations Panel on the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, United Nations, April 12, 2001.

  31 Author’s interview with Congolese politician, Kinshasa, July 2009.

  32 Author’s interview with Congolese mining lawyer, Kinshasa, July 2009.

  33 Author’s interview with Gérard Gerold, Kinshasa, January 2007.

  34 For a study of Laurent Nkunda, see Jason Stearns, “ The Emergence of a New Rebellion in North Kivu,” in Afrique des Grands Lacs: Annuaire 2007–2008, eds. Stefaan Marysse and Filip Reyntjens (Paris: L’Harmattan, 2008); for Rwandan support to Nkunda, see Final Report of the United Nations Group of Experts on the DR Congo, S/2008/773, United Nations, December 12, 2008.

  35 We Will Crush You, Human Rights Watch Report, November 2008.

  36 I was speaking with a presidential intelligence officer after an abortive coup attempt by Major Eric Lenge in July 2004.

  37 Author’s interview with officer in staff headquarters, Kinshasa, July 2009.

  38 Author’s interview with presidential advisor, Kinshasa, July 2009.

  CONCLUSION

  1 Philip Gourevitch, “Forsaken,” New Yorker, September 25, 2000, 65.

  2 The International Rescue Committee, in its most recent mortality study in 2007 concluded that 5.4 million people had died as a result of the conflict in the Congo between 1998 and 2007, not counting those who had died between 1996 and 1998, or those who have died since 2007 in the ongoing violence. “IRC Affirms Congo Mortality Findings,” J
anuary 21, 2010, www.irc.org. Figures of rape are notoriously difficult to estimate, but the United Nations believes that over 200,000 women have been victims of sexual violence since 1998. “Nearly 200 Women and Children Raped in Systematic Attack in Eastern DRC,” Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture, August 27, 2010, www.torturecare.org.uk/news/latest_news/3173, accessed September 30, 2010.

  3 Eve Ensler, “The Beginning of Hope or the End of It,” Huffington Post, October 30, 2008, www.huffingtonpost.com/eve-ensler/the-beginning-of-hope-or_b_139423.html.

  4 Jeffrey Gettleman, “Rape Victim’s Words Help Jolt Congo into Change,” New York Times, October 17, 2008.

  5 Author’s interview with Sue Hogwood, Bujumbura, March 2008.

  6 Author’s interview with presidential advisor, Kigali, February 2008.

  7 In 1993, a large UN mission (UNOSOM) was deployed to Somalia to secure the distribution of food aid to a starving population. It became embroiled in urban firefights with local militia commanders, leading to the highly publicized death of U.S. soldiers.

  8 “Code Cable 00283 from American Embassy in Kigali to Rwanda Collective, Secretary of State, Washington DC,” January 6, 1997.

  Index

  Afande, Robert

  AFDL

  background

  blocks humanitarian access to camps

  commits atrocities, massacres

  kadogo abused, deployed

  mobilizes Congolese Tutsi

  repression in new Congo regime

  welcomed by Zairians as anti-Mobutu

  Albright, Madeleine

  Alex (Banyamulenge boy)

  Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Zaire. See AFDL

  American Mineral Fields

  Amin

  Amnesty International

  Anglo American Mining Corporation

  Angola

  in coalition to overthrow Mobutu

  and L. Kabila’s assassination

  sends Katangan Tigers to help RPF

  supports Kabila against RCD advance

  and UNITA rebels

  drops L. Kabila (2000)

  Anti-Tutsi ideology

  attacks in Kinshasa

  bred by AFDL, RCD

  and citizenship ban by Mobutu

  exacerbated by youth in RPF

  as FAR military tactic

  as justification for violence

  in Uganda

  in Zaire

  See also Stereotyping

  Arendt, Hannah

  Bagosora, Théoneste

  Baldo, Suliman

  Bantariza, Shaban

  Banyamulenge (Congolese Tutsi)

  attain RCD positions

  barred from citizenship by Mobutu

  civilians massacred

  conditions after Rwandans depart DRC

  evacuated by UN from Bukavu

  evicted from Zaire

  persecuted

  protected by embassies

  as soldiers to overthrow of Mobutu

  Baramoto, Philemon

  Baril, Maurice

  Bas-Congo Province

  BBC Swahili Service Radio

  Belgian colonial era. See Colonial era of the Congo under Belgium

  Bemba, Jean-Pierre

  about

  as MLC political, military, leader

  as prime minster of Congo

  Bemba, Saolona

  Bembe, Anzuluni

  Bembe tribe

  A Bend in the River (Naipaul)

  Biblical theory of Tutsi and Hutu

  Bisengimana, Barthélémy

  Bizimungu, Pasteur

  Bokassa, Bedel

  Bonino, Emma

  Boulle, Jean-Raymond

  Boutros Ghali, Boutros

  Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo

  refuge for kadogo

  refuge for Mobutu officials

  refuge for Tutsi civilians

  Bredenkamp, John

  Bugera, Deogratias

  background

  chosen to lead Rwanda rebellion

  as RPF leader

  defects from RPF for new Tutsi rebellion

  and L. Kabila

  Bukavu, Zaire

  anti-Tutsi sentiments

  civilians, army, flee attacking Rwandans

  L. Kabila recruits kadogo

  refugee camp

  Bululu, Lunda

  Burundi

  embassy protects Kinshasa Tutsi

  –Hutu refugees in Rwanda

  and mass killing of Hutu

  mercenaries work for L. Kabila

  with Tutsi refugees (1962)

  Bush, George W.

  Butera (Rwandan commander)

  Buyoya, Pierre

  Canada

  Caritas Catholic aid group

  Castro, Fidel

  Catholic parishes and priests

  Bembe tribe prophesy

  lead protests of Rwandan invasion

  massacred

  seek revenge for Hayarimana’s death

  seminaries forced to accept Mobutu’s cells

  Trappist monks

  Central African Republic (CAR)

  Child malnutrition and mortality

  in Kisangani

  in refugee camps

  throughout Congo conflict areas

  Child marriages

  Child soldiers. See Kadogo

  China

  The Choice of Freedom (Bemba)

  Churches

  Catholic

  of Kasika massacre

  Malkia wa Ubembe in Abala

  Methodist (Mariam Kinyamarura)

  Pentecostal

  in siege of Kisangani

  in Tingi-Tingi refugee camp

  CIA (Central Intelligence Agency)

  and Lumumba’s assassination

  and Mobutu

  and Savimbi

  Citizenship

  denied to Congolese Tutsi in Zaire

  denied to refugees in Uganda

  issue sparks invasion of Zaire

  Mobutu changes position

  used to fuel anti-Tutsi sentiment

  Colonial era of Congo under Belgium

  brutality of

  dismembers kingdoms, local rule

  ethnic prejudices against Hutu–Tutsi

  Hamitic theory of race

  and L. Kabila’s father

  Leopold’s private business empire

  mismanagement of mineral assets

  Rwandans brought to Kivu

  with weak military

  Colonial era of Rwanda under Germany

  Coltan mining and market

  Conflict minerals as moral issue

  Congo, Democratic Republic of the (DRC)

  background

  Mobutu overthrown

  L. Kabila’s weak regime

  J. Kabila succeeds father as president

  unification (2002)

  See also under specific towns and battles

  Congo Free State

  Congo wars

  about

  first war (1996–1997)

  second war (1998–2003)

  third war (2003–present)

  Congolese army (second war)

  disintegrates as Rwandans advance

  Kabarebe leads rebellion against

  loses Pweto

  supported by Zimbabwe, Angola, Namibia

  J. Kabila’s officer corps

  Congolese Rally for Democracy (RCD)

  funds military with Congo’s resources

  leadership, political strategy

  massacres in Kasika and Eastern Congo

  rebellion backed, controlled, by Rwanda

  refuses UN peacekeepers

  Uganda/Bemba form MLC

  Wamba as president, ousted

  fuels insurgency against J. Kabila

  Congolese Tutsi. See Banyamulenge

  Coups d’état

  of Mobutu, Zaire (1960, 1965)

  of Habyarimana, Rwanda (1973)

  on L.
Kabila, Congo (2001)

  (attempt) on Patassé, CAR (2002)

  (attempt) on J. Kabila, Congo (2004)

  David (commander)

  De Beers company

  De Charette, Hervé

  Des Forges, Alison

  Destexhe, Alain

  Diamonds

  under L. Kabila’s regime

  Mbuji-Mayi falls to Rwandans

  mined in AFDL-controlled areas

  schemes finance Congo, Zimbabwe, militaries

  trafficked by Angolan rebels

  Uganda–Rwanda standoff in Kisangani

  Discrimination

  against Banyamulenge

  in Uganda against refugees

  See also Anti-Tutsi ideology

  Doctors Without Borders

  Donors (foreign)

  refugee crisis seen as equal to genocide

  relied on by Mobutu

  reluctant to give to L. Kabila’s regime

  repercussions of financing public services

  supply half of government budgets

  See also Humanitarian organizations

  Dos Santos, José Eduardo

  and L. Kabila

  sends Katangan Tigers to Kagame

  supports rebellion against Mobutu

  Double genocide revisionist concept

  DRC. See Congo, Democratic Republic of the

  Eastern Congo

  brutal rule of AFDL, RCD

  as mineral exporting region

  mortality rate

  ongoing insurgency

  plundered by Rwanda, Uganda

  Rwanda invades, takes control

  Eichmann, Adolph

  Endundo, José

  Enveloppe method of influence

  Eritrea

  Ethiopia

  Ethnicity

  as deciding factor for Mobutu’s army, staff

  fails to explain Tutsi–Hutu violence

  limits rebellions

  mobilization vs. institutional resistance

  Evil, nature of

  Ex-FAR (ex-Rwandan Armed Forces)

  armed by France

  as feared militia

  massacred by RPF

  with Mobutu’s troops

  recruited by L. Kabila for second war

  return to massacre Rwandan Tutsi, Hutu

  FAR. See Ex-FAR (ex-Rwandan Armed Forces)

  FDLR

  Forces Armées Zairoises (FAZ)

  The 48 Rules of Power (Greene)

 

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