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Republic of the Congo

Republic of Congo Country Profile
6 December 2012

The Republic of Congo, also known as Congo-Brazzaville, became independent from France in 1960. The country is ethnically diverse, with 48% Kongolese, 20% Sangha, 17% Teke, 12% M’Bochi, and 3% European and immigrants.

Historically the Kongo established several kingdoms along the Congo River and ruled much of present day Congo, the Democratic Republic of Congo and northern Angola. Portuguese traders arrived on the Congo River in the 1500’s. King Nzinga converted to Christianity and his son, Afonso I, mandated construction of many churches. A diplomatic relationship with the Vatican was even formed.

The colonization of Brazil and the ensuing Portuguese slave trade led to deterioration of the relationship with King Afonso I, who complained that the slave trade was depopulating his kingdom and fomenting war. Even royal family members were enslaved and deported to Brazil. Revolts against Portuguese rule were defeated by Portuguese force. The kingdom of the Kongo disintegrated.
During the scramble for Africa of the late 19th century, Congo’s strategic position in the heart of Africa, its plethora of natural resources and the presence of the Congo river made it a prime target for European colonization. France, Belgium and Portugal fought for control of the river. The mouth of the river was divided between Portugal and France, with a portion to Belgium. The Belgian King Leopold made the Congo Free State his personal property and extended his rule over all of what is currently the Democratic Republic of the Congo. He murderously exploited its rubber, ivory, gold, and diamonds until forced to give up his personal rule to the Belgian state after one of the world’s first human rights campaigns.

France conquered the area north of the Congo River and signed a treaty with King Makoko, establishing the French Congo, which became part of French Equatorial Africa. During Nazi occupation of France during World War II, Brazzaville became the symbolic capital of Free France between 1940 and 1943.
The Republic of Congo was granted full independence from France on August 15, 1960, with Fulbert Youlou elected the first president. Soon the military took control of the country. They adopted Marxism-Leninism and established relations with the Soviet Union. Denis Sassou Nguesso became President. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Republic of Congo held multi-party elections and in 1992 Pascal Lissouba became President.

Civil War: In 1997 ethnic and political tensions exploded into a full-scale civil war, fuelled in part by the prize of the country's offshore oil wealth. The army split along ethnic lines, with most northern officers joining President Denis Sassou Nguesso's side, and most southerners backing Lissouba. Sassou Nguesso’s troops were backed by Angola. By the end of 1999, Lissouba was defeated and agreed to a ceasefire. Remnants of Lissouba’s militias, known as Ninjas, are still armed and have turned to banditry.

Oil and diamonds: The Republic of Congo is one of sub-Saharan Africa's main oil producers, though seventy percent of the population lives in abject poverty. Oil is the mainstay of the economy. In 2004 the country was expelled from the Kimberley Process that is supposed to prevent conflict diamonds from entering the world supply market, because the Republic of Congo could not account for the origin of large quantities of rough diamonds that it was officially exporting. IMF debt relief to the country was delayed in 2006 following allegations of corruption.

In 2009 another election took place, with Sassou winning by a large margin. Many election observers noted widespread fraud. Six opposition candidates boycotted the election. Ethnic divisions remain strong.

Genocide Watch Stage 6

Eastern Congo: Thousands of Children Threatened by Violence, Disease and Sexual
Assault
Nicholas Edmondson, International Business Times UK
03 September 2012

Thousands of children are at immediate risk of disease, starvation and violent attacks in the
Eastern Congo, a charity has warned.
More than 25,000 children are living in makeshift camps across the region and are currently in
serious need of aid, according to War Child.
Hundreds of thousands of Congolese families have fled the area around North Kivu and Goma,
following renewed clashes between the M23 rebel movement and the National Congolese army.
According to War Child's Child Protection Alert, the response of the UN and international
community has fallen short and represents a "fatal pause in care and protection". (read more)

Sleeping Through the Slaughter 

By Jessica Hatcher, Photos: Phil Moore

In the last few months, I’ve spent time in the Democratic Republic of Congo where I used an embarrassing screw-up by one of the world's most publicly accountable organisations as a bargaining tool to get a story. A mistake by the United Nations means I saw something I shouldn't have*, and when I agreed to agree it never happened, they reluctantly allowed me to join a massacre investigation mission in the most damaged part of what is, if their own statistics are to be trusted, the most damaged country in the world. (Read More)


RD Congo: Condamnation des violences sexuelles

Par Afriquejet
20 juillet 2012

 Le représentant spécial par intérim du Secrétaire général de l'ONU sur la violence sexuelle dans les conflits, Vijay Nambiar, a condamné la violence sexuelle qui aurait été perpétrée en RD Congo par un groupe de soldats renégats connu sous le nom M23 et a appelé les autorités à enquêter sur les crimes.

Dans un communiqué publié jeudi à New York, il a indiqué qu'au moment où la violence connaît une escalade dans l'Est de la RD Congo, il est profondément préoccupé par le fait que le conflit est encore une fois caractérisé par des violences sexuelles. (read more)


Le porte-parole du gouvernement congolais Lambert Mende, le 28 juin 2012 à Kinshasa AFP - Junior D.Kannah
Kinshasa demande à Kigali de "cesser d'alimenter la guerre" en RDCongo

Par AFP
28 Juin 2012

 La République démocratique du Congo "exige que les autorités rwandaises cessent de laisser leurs officiers continuer à alimenter la guerre" dans l'est de la RDC, a déclaré jeudi le porte-parole du gouvernement congolais Lambert Mende.

"Nous exigeons que les autorités rwandaises arrêtent, cessent de laisser leurs officiers continuer à alimenter la guerre au Congo", a-t-il déclaré en faisant état des "preuves accablantes" contenues dans les annexes d'un rapport d'experts de l'ONU selon lesquels des mutins ex-rebelles qui s'opposent depuis mai à l'armée congolaise au Nord-Kivu (est) ont reçu l'appui d'officiers rwandais.

"Nous leurs demandons de démanteler les réseaux, les filières de recrutement et de ravitaillement en faveur des forces négatives qui sont au Congo, sans conditions", a ajouté M. Mende lors d'un point de presse. (read more)


Updates

06 December 2012 Republic of Congo Country Profile By Genocide Watch

18 September 2012 "Eastern Congo Thousands of Children Threatened by Violence" By IBT UK

August 2012 "Trials of Thomas Lubanga and Ratko Mladiic show impunity for war crimes is dissappearing-slowly" McClatchy Newspapers

09 August 2012 "DRC no negotiations with M23 rebels" By Voice of America

06 August 2012  "UN humanitarian chied seeks first hand look at Congo crisis" By Voice of America

01 August 2012 "Civilian casualties continue in DRC" By Voice of America

31 July 2012 "Tens of Thousands flee North Kivu" By Voice of America

27 July 2012 "DR Congo army continues to battle rebels" By Al Jazeera

26 July 2012 "DRC rebels advance in North Kivu province" By Voice of America

25 July 2012 "Thousands of Congolese civilians flee from renewed fighting" By Voice of America

23 July 2012 "Fighting in North Kive forces thousands to flee" By Voice of America

19 July 2012 "DRC army takes over North Kivu town from rebels" By Voice of America

13 July 2012 "ICC issues warrant for Rwandan Hutu rebel chief Mudacumura" By Robin Utrecht

09 July 2012 "ICC sentences Congolese warlord to 14 years in prison" By Voice of America

07 July 2012 "Peacekeepers vow to protect eastern Congo city from rebels" By Voice of America

27 June 2012 "Burundian journalist and 13 others jailed for life" By AfricaNews

27 June 2012 "UN peacekeepers deployed to Congo's North Kivu Provice"  By Voice of America

19 June 2012 "UN Security Council condemns FDLR atrocities" By The New Times Rwanda

13 June 2012 " ICC seeks 30 year sentence for Congo warlord Lubanga"  By BBC News

06 June 2012 "DRC says close to crushing Ntaganda rebellion" by Voice of America

06 June 2012 "Mutuneers seize territory in Eastern DRC" By Reuters

06 June 2012 "ICC prosecutors seeks 30 year term for Congolese warlord" By Gilbert Kreijger- Reuters

05 June 2012 "Human rights watch calls for Rwanda to arrest Congolese war crime suspect" By Kim Lewis-Voice of America

31 May 2012 " Tens of thousands flee extreme violence in Congo" By The Guardian

31 May 2012 "ICC rejects arrest warrant for Mudacumura for DRC crimes" By Voice of America

30 May 2012 "UN Condemns Upsurge in 'Blind Violence' in Eastern Congo" by Nick Long- Voice of America

30 May 2012 "ICC Confirms release of Congo war crimes suspect," by Reuters

5 May 2012 " Seven UN Peacekeepers shot at Congo protest," by Reuters

23 September 2010 "African Regional Committee on Genocide established," by Prof. William Schabas, President, International Association of Genocide Scholars

13 July 2009 "Low turnout may mar Congo Republic election" by Reuters

1 December 2007 "From Genocide to Regional Warfare: The Breakdown of International Order in Central Africa" by Christian R. Manahl, African Studies Quarterly

27 October 2007 "Eastern Congo Militia Leader Surrenders to UN" by Joe Bavier. Reuters Foundation

19 October 2007 "Congo: War Crimes Suspect in the Hague" New York Times

21 February 2007 "DRC Troops Jailed for War Crimes" by BBC News

2 February 2007 "Congo: 35 Killed in Election Clashes" by Reuters

30 January 2007 "Court Orders Trial for Congolese Warlord Accused of Conscripting Children" by The Washington Post

17 November 2006 "Challenger in Congo Vote Says He’ll Contest Results" by The New York Times

16 November 2006 "Accused Congolese Warlord’s Forced Shot Child Soldier Who Tried to Flee, Expert Says" by The Associated Press

30 October 2006 "Despite Tension, Millions Vote in Congo" by The New York Times

12 October 2006 "Armies of Children" by The New York Times

10 September 2006 "Briton Linked to Congo War Crimes" by The Sunday Times

4 September 2006 "Election Workers Arrested for Alleged Ballot Cheating in Congo" by The Associated Press

25 August 2006 "Congo: 23 Died in Violence in Capital" by The New York Times

23 August 2006 "Annan Calls for an End to Violence in DR Congo; Urges all Forces off the Capital’s Streets" by UN News Centre

22 August 2006 "Congo Election Foes Agree to U.N. Cease-Fire" by The New York Times

11 August 2006 "Congo Count Slips into Chaos as Monitors Deports" by Independent News and Media

4 August 2006 "Congo Candidates Warn Foreign Powers Not to Meddle" by Reuters

25 July 2006 "600 Children Die Each Day in Legacy of War" by The Guardian

24 July 2006 "Congolese Army Inspires Fear, Not Trust" by The Associated Press

21 July 2006 "D.R. Congo: As Vote Nears, Abuses Go Unpunished in Katanga" by Human Rights Watch

20 March 2006 "Congolese Warlord is First to Face World Criminal Court" by The New York Times

14 December 2006 "Australians on Trial in Congo, Says Lawyers" by The Age

3 November 2005 "34 Killed As Army And U.N. Free Poll Workers" by Reuters

20 March 2005 "Beyond the Bullets and Blades" by The New York Times

14 August 2004 "At Least 180 Congolese Refugees Massacred" by The Associated Press

21 April 2004 "Hopes and Tears of Congo Flow in Its Mythic River" by Somini Sengupta in the New York Times

14 February 2004 "Killing of a U.N. Observer in Congo Heightens a Mission's Fears," by Somini Sengupta in The New York Times

30 June 2003 "Women In Congo" in the New York Times

29 June 2003 "Whispers of Genocide, and Again, Africa Suffers Alone" by Lynne Duke in The Washington Post

1 June 2003 "In Africa, Pricking the West’s Conscience" by The New York Times

20 May 2003 "U.N.: 231 Killed in Congo Tribal Fighting" by The Associated Press

16 May 2003 "Congo-Kinshasa; Annan Urges Emergency UN Force to Quell Violence in Northeastern DR of Congo" by Africa News

22 April 2003 "Congo: First Deputy Is Named" by The New York Times

20 April 2003 "Chaos in Congo Suits Many Parties Just Fine" by The New York Times

10 April 2003 "A Perfect Specimen Of Colonial Mythmaking" by The Washington Post

8 April 2003 "Conflict in Congo has killed 4.7m, charity says" by The Guardian

7 April 2003 "966 Congolese Are Killed In Attacks on Villages" by The Associated Press

6 April 2003 "Ethnic Massacres Kill Hundreds In Ituri, Congo" by Agence France Presse

20 March 2003 "DR Congo: A neglected human rights tragedy in Ituri province" by Amnesty International

19 May 2003 "EU Says Quick- Reaction Peacekeepers Ready" by The Associated Press

16 January 2003 "U.N. Says Congo Rebels Carried Out Cannibalism and Rapes" by The Associated Press

10 August 2002 "Death Toll at Least 75 in Eastern Congo Clashes" by Reuters

2002 "Final Report of the Panel of Experts on the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources and Other Forms of Wealth of the Democratic Republic of the Congo" by the UN Security Council

29 January 2001 "Congo's War Turns a Land Spat Into a Blood Bath" by The New York Times

15 August 2000 "More Parties Becoming Involved in Bunia, Congo" GenocideWatch

February 2000 "Genocide Emergency: Ituri, Eastern Congo" by GenocideWatch


Genocide Watch is the Coordinator of the International Alliance to End Genocide
P.O. Box 809, Washington, D.C. 20044 USA. Phone: 1-202-643-1405
E-mail:communications@genocidewatch.org