D.R. of Congo: Congolese Diaspora Erupts Against Kabila

Although the community of Congolese (DRC) nationals based abroad was not granted the right to vote [fr] during the November 28, 2011, presidential and parliamentary elections, it has shown its commitment to being involved in the political debate.

Using various online channels, the Congolese diaspora have organised several initiatives to raise awareness amongst fellow citizens and members of the international community. Indeed, the diaspora have succeeded in making themselves heard.

On December 7, the ambassadors of France, the United Kingdom and Belgium in Kinshasa pressed [fr] the long-time opposition leader and candidate in the presidential election Etienne Tshisekedi to ask his partisans to stop violence in foreign capitals. Tshisekedi came in second in the polls according to the temporary results announced by the National Independent Electoral Commission (CENI).

According to Nicolas-Patience Basabose, Director of Publication of Le Congo Hebdo [fr] (Congo Weekly), who is based in South Africa, the diaspora is still strongly connected to their homeland [fr]:

Les Congolais de l’étranger ont un rôle très politique à jouer car la plupart ne sont pas partis pour découvrir le monde en soit mais poussés par des conditions sociopolitiques pas très favorable. Les expats sont très connectés avec le pays surtout durant les 10 ans meurtrières de Kabila. Manifester et faire du bruit était sûrement la seule et unique chose que la diaspora pouvait faire pour faire peser leurs voix dans le processus électoral en court.

Congolese abroad have an important political role to play because most of them did not leave their country to discover the world, but were pushed outside the country by unfavorable social and political conditions. Expatriates have been very connected to their country, especially during the deadly [President] Kabila decade. Demonstrating and making some noise was probably the only way for the diaspora to make their voices count in the current electoral process.

In France, the DR of Congo Embassy in Paris was scaled by anti-Kabila protesters who said they were taking back their territory, and asserted that Tshisekedi was the real winner of the election. The demonstrators adopted a strategy to divert the attention of French public security forces who guard the official building, and arrived hidden in a truck.

RPBIjou posted on YouTube the following images on December 5:

Violent demonstrations took place near the European Union headquarters in Brussels, Belgium (the country that is the former colonial power in the DR of Congo). On December 7, YouTube user The voice of Congo posted a video of Congolese citizens demonstrating on December 5, in the streets of Brussels, while heading to the DR Congo embassy.

Belgian francophone news site Lesoir.be [fr], reported that the protests turned violent and a few protesters were arrested after throwing stones at law enforcement officers and causing damage to shops and public infrastructure.

Other demonstrations were organised in London, (BBC report) and in Italy.

The Congolese diaspora also have an important economic role to play in the future of the country. According to an academic study [fr], funded by the European Commission and the Belgian Ministry of Development, the 40,300 legal Congolese residents in Belgium send approximatively USD $ 130,000,000,00 to their relatives back in the DR of Congo. It is therefore highly probable that in this country, whose GDP equals USD $ 11 billion, migrant remittances make up an important part of the national wealth.

Congolese Protest in London by new chap on Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

By demonstrating in foreign capitals, Congolese of the diaspora also want to denounce certain Western powers and their mineral companies. Here is a video posted on YouTube in which a member of the Congolese diaspora in Alberta, Canada accuses Canadian companies of operating illegally in Congo:

We denounce, accuse and complain against these officials for their support and involvement in the Joseph Kabila government that the Congolese have rejected during the November 28, 2011 elections. They are criminals in Congo and they are also criminals in Canada and criminals according to international laws. (…) We have information from reliable sources about all the names of all the Canadian public figures whose companies are involved in the illicit exploitation of mines in Congo.

The day after this statement was made public, a demonstration took place in Ottawa, capital of Canada. According to PeterPW who posted the video on YouTube, “What started off as a peaceful protest…turned violent as protesters began hurling rocks and spraying graffiti on the Congolese embassy.”

Johannesburg also witnessed the march of hundreds of Congolese nationals. Among them was a naked man, who shouted “Kabila must go”, and asked President Zuma, who allegedly supports the outgoing president, to leave Congo. The voice of Congo posted this video:

Other protests occured in Africa, particularly in Morocco.

6 comments

  • Gabonese people are with the freedom fighters of RDC! Don’t be afraid! The revolution must continue! Comme en Egypte, rassemblez 1 million de Congolais à Kinshasa et défier l’armée et le pouvoir corrompu de Kabila!

  • […] D.R. of Congo: Congolese Diaspora Erupts Against Kabila […]

  • […] Kongo (DRC): Wakongo Waishio Nje ya Nchi Walipuka Kumpinga Kabila […]

  • […] and other cities in DR of Congo. Outrage even spread in the Congolese diaspora abroad where unrest rocked several cities of Europe and North America. The Wikipedia page of the DR of Congo as of January 2, 2012, even lists Tshisekedi as the current […]

  • […] News 24; Al Jazeera; LA Times; BBC; NPR; Mail & Guardian; VOA; Global Voices. […]

  • zfranca

    ENGLISH

    The escalating violence, behavior of vandalism and barbarism perpetrated by a group of individuals under the denomination “COMBATANT” from the Democratic Republic of Congo which the majority are the “living illegally in foreign lands” has nothing to do with Democracy process in the Congo, it is a shame for their leader who claim democracy after his failure to elections in the DRC and does encourage and uses this group as a shield to vandalize the investment and disturb other people in their own countries. So guys if you claim you are combatant better you go back to fight in your own country… not in London or German at least.

    FRENCH

    L’escalade de la violence, le comportement indigne de vandalisme et de barbarie perpétrés par un groupe d’individus sous la dénomination “combattant” de la République démocratique du Congo dont la majorité sont le «vivant illégalement dans des pays étrangers” n’a rien à voir avec le processus de la démocratie au Congo, c’est une honte pour leur leader qui pourtant prétend etre démocrate mais rejete les principe de la democratie et après son échec aux élections libre et democratique en RDC, il s’encourage et utilise ce groupe comme un bouclier pour vandaliser l’investissement et de déranger les autres citoyens dans leur propre pays quelle fiasco . Alors les gars, si vous prétendez que vous êtes meilleur combattants c’est mieux de rentrer et battre dans votre propre pays … pas à Londre ou en allemagne au moins.

Join the conversation

Authors, please log in »

Guidelines

  • All comments are reviewed by a moderator. Do not submit your comment more than once or it may be identified as spam.
  • Please treat others with respect. Comments containing hate speech, obscenity, and personal attacks will not be approved.