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Background Note: Democratic Republic of the Congo
PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Democratic Republic
of the Congo
Geography
Location: Central Africa. Bordering nations--Angola,
Burundi, Central African Republic, Republic of the Congo, Sudan,
Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia.
Area: 2.345 sq. km. (905,063 sq. mi.; about the size of the U.S.
east of the Mississippi).
Cities: Capital--Kinshasa (pop. 6.5 million).
Regional capitals--Bandundu, Bukavu, Goma, Kananga, Kindu,
Kisangani, Lubumbashi, Matadi, Mbandaka, Mbuji-Mayi.
Terrain: Varies from tropical rainforests to mountainous
terraces, plateau, savannas, dense grasslands, and mountains.
Climate: Equatorial; ranges from tropical rainforest in the
Congo River basin, hot and humid in much of the north and west,
cooler and drier in the south central area and the east.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Congolese.
Population (2004 est.): 58 million.
Annual growth rate (2004 est.): 2.99%.
Ethnic groups: More than 200 African ethnic groups; the Luba,
Kongo, and Anamongo are some of the larger groupings of tribes.
Religions (2004 est.): Roman Catholic 50%, Protestant 20%, other
syncretic sects and traditional beliefs 10%, Kimbanguist 10%,
Muslim 10%.
Language: Official--French. National languages--Lingala,
Swahili, Kikongo, Tshiluba.
Education: Literacy (2004 est.)--65.5% in French or
local language. Schooling (2000 est.)--none 41.7%,
primary 42.2%, secondary 15.4%, university 0.7%.
Health (2004 est.): Infant mortality rate--94.69/1,000
live births. Life expectancy--49 yrs.
Government
Type: Republic; highly centralized with executive power vested
in the president.
Independence: June 30, 1960 (from Belgium).
Suffrage: 18 years of age; universal and compulsory.
Economy
GDP (2003): $5.6 billion.
Annual GDP growth rate (2005): 6%.
Per capita GDP (2005): $120.
Natural resources: Copper, cobalt, diamonds, gold, other
minerals; petroleum; wood; hydroelectric potential.
Agriculture: Cash crops--coffee, rubber, palm oil,
cotton, cocoa, sugar, tea. Food crops--manioc, corn,
legumes, plantains, peanuts.
Land use: Agriculture 3%; pasture 7%; forest/woodland 77%; other
13%.
Industry: Types--processed and unprocessed minerals;
consumer products, including textiles, plastics, footwear,
cigarettes, metal products; processed foods and beverages,
cement, timber.
Currency: Congolese franc (FC).
Trade: Exports (2002)--$1.040 billion. Products--diamonds,
cobalt, copper, coffee, petroleum. Partners--E.U.,
Japan, South Africa, U.S., China. Imports
(2002)--$1.216 billion. Products--consumer goods (food,
textiles), capital equipment, refined petroleum products.
Partners--E.U., China, South Africa, U.S.
Total external debt (2002): $8.211 billion. (Currently under
revision due to HIPC decision point in 2003.)
GEOGRAPHY
The Democratic Republic of the Congo (D.R.C.) includes the
greater part of the Congo River basin, which covers an area of
almost 1 million square kilometers (400,000 sq. mi.). The
country's only outlet to the Atlantic Ocean is a narrow strip of
land on the north bank of the Congo River.
PEOPLE
The population of D.R.C. was estimated at 58 million in 2004. As
many as 250 ethnic groups have been distinguished and named.
Some of the larger groupings of tribes are the Kongo, Luba, and
Anamongo. Although 700 local languages and dialects are spoken,
the linguistic variety is bridged both by the use of French and
the intermediary languages Kikongo, Tshiluba, Swahili, and
Lingala.
About 50% of the Congolese population is
Christian, predominantly Roman Catholic. Most of the
non-Christians adhere to either traditional religions or
syncretic sects. Traditional religions include concepts such as
monotheism, animism, vitalism, spirit and ancestor worship,
witchcraft, and sorcery and vary widely among ethnic groups;
none is formalized. The syncretic sects often merge Christianity
with traditional beliefs and rituals. The most popular of these
sects, Kimbanguism, was seen as a threat to the colonial regime
and was banned by the Belgians. Kimbanguism, officially "the
church of Christ on Earth by the prophet Simon Kimbangu," now
claims about 3 million members, primarily among the Bakongo
tribe of Bas-Congo and Kinshasa. In 1969, it was the first
independent African church admitted to the World Council of
Churches.
Before independence, education was largely in
the hands of religious groups. The primary school system was
well developed at independence; however, the secondary school
system was limited, and higher education was almost nonexistent
in most regions of the country. The principal objective of this
system was to train low-level administrators and clerks. Since
independence, efforts have been made to increase access to
education, and secondary and higher education have been made
available to many more Congolese. According to estimates made in
2000, 41.7% of the population has no schooling, 42.2% has
primary schooling, 15.4% has secondary schooling, and 0.7% has
university schooling. At all levels of education, males greatly
outnumber females. The largest state-run universities are the
University of Kinshasa, the University of Lubumbashi, and the
University of Kisangani. The elite continue to send their
children abroad to be educated, primarily in Western Europe.
HISTORY
The area known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo was
populated as early as 10,000 years ago and settled in the 7th
and 8th centuries A.D. by Bantus from present-day Nigeria.
Discovered in 1482 by Portuguese navigator Diego Cao and later
explored by English journalist Henry Morton Stanley, the area
was officially colonized in 1885 as a personal possession of
Belgian King Leopold II as the Congo Free State. In 1907,
administration shifted to the Belgian Government, which renamed
the country the Belgian Congo. Following a series of riots and
unrest, the Belgian Congo was granted its independence on June
30, 1960. Parliamentary elections in 1960 produced Patrice
Lumumba as prime minister and Joseph Kasavubu as president of
the renamed Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Within the first year of independence, several
events destabilized the country: the army mutinied; the governor
of Katanga province attempted secession; a UN peacekeeping force
was called in to restore order; Prime Minister Lumumba died
under mysterious circumstances; and Col. Joseph Désiré Mobutu
(later Mobutu Sese Seko) took over the government and ceded it
again to President Kasavubu.
Unrest and rebellion plagued the government
until 1965, when Lieutenant General Mobutu, by then commander in
chief of the national army, again seized control of the country
and declared himself president for 5 years. Mobutu quickly
centralized power into his own hands and was elected unopposed
as president in 1970. Embarking on a campaign of cultural
awareness, Mobutu renamed the country the Republic of Zaire and
required citizens to adopt African names. Relative peace and
stability prevailed until 1977 and 1978 when Katangan rebels,
staged in Angola, launched a series of invasions into the
Katanga region. The rebels were driven out with the aid of
Belgian paratroopers.
During the 1980s, Mobutu continued to enforce
his one-party system of rule. Although Mobutu successfully
maintained control during this period, opposition parties, most
notably the Union pour la Democratie et le Progres Social (UDPS),
were active. Mobutu's attempts to quell these groups drew
significant international criticism.
As the Cold War came to a close, internal and
external pressures on Mobutu increased. In late 1989 and early
1990, Mobutu was weakened by a series of domestic protests, by
heightened international criticism of his regime's human rights
practices, and by a faltering economy. In April 1990 Mobutu
agreed to the principle of a multi-party system with elections
and a constitution. As details of a reform package were delayed,
soldiers in September 1991 began looting Kinshasa to protest
their unpaid wages. Two thousand French and Belgian troops, some
of whom were flown in on U.S. Air Force planes, arrived to
evacuate the 20,000 endangered foreign nationals in Kinshasa.
In 1992, after previous similar attempts, the
long-promised Sovereign National Conference was staged,
encompassing more than 2,000 representatives from various
political parties. The conference gave itself a legislative
mandate and elected Archbishop Laurent Monsengwo as its
chairman, along with Etienne Tshisekedi, leader of the UDPS, as
prime minister. By the end of the year Mobutu had created a
rival government with its own prime minister. The ensuing
stalemate produced a compromise merger of the two governments
into the High Council of Republic-Parliament of Transition (HCR-PT)
in 1994, with Mobutu as head of state and Kengo Wa Dondo as
prime minister. Although presidential and legislative elections
were scheduled repeatedly over the next 2 years, they never took
place.
By 1996, the war and genocide in neighboring
Rwanda had spilled over to Zaire. Rwandan Hutu militia forces (Interahamwe),
who fled Rwanda following the ascension of a Tutsi-led
government, were using Hutu refugee camps in eastern Zaire as
bases for incursions against Rwanda.
In October 1996, Rwandan troops (RPA) entered
Zaire, simultaneously with the formation of an armed coalition
led by Laurent-Desire Kabila known as the Alliance des Forces
Democratiques pour la Liberation du Congo-Zaire (AFDL). With the
goal of forcibly ousting Mobutu, the AFDL, supported by Rwanda
and Uganda, began a military campaign toward Kinshasa. Following
failed peace talks between Mobutu and Kabila in May 1997, Mobutu
left the country, and Kabila marched into Kinshasa on May 17,
1997. Kabila declared himself president, consolidated power
around himself and the AFDL, and renamed the country the
Democratic Republic of Congo (D.R.C.). Kabila’s Army Chief and
the Secretary General of the AFDL were Rwandan, and RPA units
continued to operate tangentially with the D.R.C.’s military,
which was renamed the Forces Armees Congolaises (FAC).
Over the next year, relations between Kabila
and his foreign backers deteriorated. In July 1998, Kabila
ordered all foreign troops to leave the D.R.C. Most refused to
leave. On August 2, fighting erupted throughout the D.R.C. as
Rwandan troops in the D.R.C. "mutinied," and fresh Rwandan and
Ugandan troops entered the D.R.C. Two days later, Rwandan troops
flew to Bas-Congo, with the intention of marching on Kinshasa,
ousting Laurent Kabila, and replacing him with the newly formed
Rwandan-backed rebel group called the Rassemblement Congolais
pour la Democratie (RCD). The Rwandan campaign was thwarted at
the last minute when Angolan, Zimbabwean, and Namibian troops
intervened on behalf of the D.R.C. Government. The Rwandans and
the RCD withdrew to eastern D.R.C., where they established de
facto control over portions of eastern D.R.C. and continued to
fight the Congolese Army and its foreign allies.
In February 1999, Uganda backed the formation
of a rebel group called the Mouvement pour la Liberation du
Congo (MLC), which drew support from among ex-Mobutuists and ex-FAZ
soldiers in Equateur province (Mobutu’s home province).
Together, Uganda and the MLC established control over the
northern third of the D.R.C.
At this stage, the D.R.C. was divided de facto
into three segments, and the parties controlling each segment
had reached military deadlock. In July 1999, a cease-fire was
proposed in Lusaka, Zambia, which all parties signed by the end
of August. The Lusaka Accord called for a cease-fire, the
deployment of a UN peacekeeping operation, MONUC, the withdrawal
of foreign troops, and the launching of an "Inter-Congolese
Dialogue" to form a transitional government leading to
elections. The parties to the Lusaka Accord failed to fully
implement its provisions in 1999 and 2000. Laurent Kabila drew
increasing international criticism for blocking full deployment
of UN troops, hindering progress toward an Inter-Congolese
Dialogue, and suppressing internal political activity.
On January 16, 2001, Laurent Kabila was
assassinated. He was succeeded by his son, Joseph Kabila. Joseph
Kabila reversed many of his father’s negative policies; over the
next year, MONUC deployed throughout the country, and the
Inter-Congolese Dialogue proceeded. By the end of 2002, all
Angolan, Namibian, and Zimbabwean troops had withdrawn from the
D.R.C. Following D.R.C.-Rwanda talks in South Africa that
culminated in the Pretoria Accord in July 2002, Rwandan troops
officially withdrew from the D.R.C. in October 2002, although
there were continued, unconfirmed reports that Rwandan soldiers
and military advisers remained integrated with RCD/G forces in
eastern D.R.C. Ugandan troops officially withdrew from the D.R.C.
in May 2003.
In October 2001, the Inter-Congolese Dialogue
began in Addis Ababa under the auspices of Facilitator Ketumile
Masire (former president of Botswana). The initial meetings made
little progress and were adjourned. On February 25, 2002, the
dialogue was reconvened in South Africa. It included
representatives from the government, rebel groups, political
opposition, civil society, and Mai-Mai (Congolese local defense
militias). The talks ended inconclusively on April 19, 2002,
when the government and the MLC brokered an agreement that was
signed by the majority of delegates at the dialogue but left out
the RCD/G and opposition UDPS party, among others.
This partial agreement was never implemented,
and negotiations resumed in South Africa in October 2002. This
time, the talks led to an all-inclusive powersharing agreement,
which was signed by delegates in Pretoria on December 17, 2002,
and formally ratified by all parties on April 2, 2003.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Following nominations by each of the various signatory groups,
President Kabila on June 30, 2003 issued a decree that formally
announced the transitional government lineup. The four vice
presidents took the oath of office on July 17, 2003, and most
incoming ministers assumed their new functions within days
thereafter.
A transitional constitution was adopted on
April 2, 2003; a new constitution was promulgated February 2006.
Extensive executive, legislative, and military powers are vested
in the president. The legislature does not have the power to
overturn the government through a vote of no confidence. The
judiciary is nominally independent; the president has the power
to dismiss and appoint judges. The president is head of a
35-member cabinet of ministers.
President Joseph Kabila has made significant
progress in liberalizing domestic political activity,
establishing a transitional government, and undertaking economic
reforms in cooperation with the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund (IMF). However, serious human rights problems
remain in the security services and justice system. The eastern
part of the country is characterized by ongoing violence and
armed conflict, which has created a humanitarian disaster and
contributed to civilian deaths (more than 3.8 million, according
to a prominent international non-governmental organization).
MONUC continues to play an important peacekeeping role in the
D.R.C., and in October 2004, its authorized force strength
increased to 16,700.
On July 30, 2006 the D.R.C. held its first
free, democratic, multi-party elections in more than 40 years.
The D.R.C.’s 25 million registered voters were charged with
electing a president (from a field of 33 candidates) and 500
deputies to the National Assembly (out of a total of 9,709
candidates). Despite some unexpected technical and logistical
difficulties, coupled with isolated incidents of violence and
intimidation, the elections were held in a largely calm and
orderly fashion. Voter turnout nationwide was high, particularly
in the eastern provinces, compared to the December 2005
constitutional referendum.
The Independent Electoral Commission (CEI) on
August 20, 2006 announced official provisional results from the
July 30 presidential elections. According to CEI figures,
incumbent Joseph Kabila won 44.81% of the votes cast versus Vice
President Jean-Pierre Bemba’s 20.3%. As no candidate won a
majority of votes in the first round and in accordance with the
country’s electoral law, the top two recipients, Kabila and
Bemba faced off in a second round of balloting. Threats to the
D.R.C.’s transitional process were marked by military clashes in
Kinshasa just hours after provisional election results were
announced. This crisis was exclusively confined to central
Kinshasa in the Gombe area and was essentially a clash between
Vice President Bemba and President Kabila’s militias. The runoff
presidential elections were held on October 29, 2006. On
November 27, 2006 the Congolese Supreme Court declared President
Kabila the winner over Vice President Bemba by a margin of 58%
to 42%. Kabila was inaugurated on December 6, 2006.
Voters in July 2006 also chose from among
9,709 legislative candidates to fill 500 seats in the National
Assembly, representing 169 electoral districts. Approximately
one-third of these districts elected one deputy by a simple
majority. The rest were multiple-seat districts, ranging from
two representatives to a maximum of 17 (in one of Kinshasa’s
voting districts). In these areas, deputies were chosen by
proportional representation using open party lists. To select
the winners in multiple-seat districts, all valid votes cast
were first divided according to political party. Next, an
“electoral quotient” was determined by dividing the number of
votes cast by the number of representatives to be elected.
Finally, the number of votes a party received was divided by
this “electoral quotient” to determine how many seats the party
will win. The candidates ultimately elected are those who
received the highest number of votes within their particular
party lists. National Assembly deputies will also serve
five-year terms and there is no restriction on the number of
times they can be re-elected.
Organizing the D.R.C.’s July 2006 elections
presented significant logistical challenges. Supported in large
part by the MONUC peacekeeping mission, the Independent
Electoral Commission opened more than 50,000 polling stations
nationwide and employed some 300,000-poll workers on election
day and to oversee the ballot counting process. The presidential
and legislative ballots were printed in South Africa and
altogether weighed nearly 1,800 tons, requiring 75 round-trip
flights between the D.R.C. and South Africa.
The population of the D.R.C. is estimated to
be about 60 million, and the country’s electoral law grants the
right to vote to those ages 18 or older. For the July 2006
elections, the CEI reported that of the 25,420,99 registered
voters, 17,931,238 went to the polls, a voter participation rate
of 70.54%. Of the 17.9 million ballots cast, 993,704
(approximately 5%) were disqualified due to empty ballots or
marking errors. In 2005, approximately 25.7 million Congolese
registered as voters (out of an original estimate of 28 million
eligible to do so). In the D.R.C.’s December 2005 constitutional
referendum, roughly two-thirds of all registered voters
participated.
The D.R.C. legislature held its first session
on September 22, 2006. On February 26, 2007, Prime Minister
Antoine Gizenga and the new Congolese cabinet formally took
office. In May 2007, Kengo wa Dongo was elected Senate
President.
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