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Mobutu Sese Seko
1930 - 1997

Mobutu Sese Seko was the second president of the Congo (at one
time called Zaire, now known as the Democratic Republic of the
Congo), taking office in late 1965.
Mobutu Sese Seko was born Joseph Désiré Mobutu on Oct. 14, 1930,
at Lisala. (He later abandoned those names in favour of African
names.) Although his ascendancy was Ngbandi (a non-Bantu tribe
of Sudanese origin), he grew up among the Bantu-speaking
riverine peoples of the Congo who are commonly referred to as
Bangala. He attended a secondary school run by Catholic
missionaries at Coquilhatville (later Mbandaka) and after being
dismissed for insubordination was drafted into the Force
Publique in 1950.
Because of his educational qualifications, Mobutu was trained as
a noncommissioned officer and given a desk job as an accountant.
He also tried his hand at journalism by writing a few pieces for
army periodicals, and when he left the Force Publique in 1956,
he became a stringer and then a regular staffer in Léopoldville,
rising to the post of editor of the weekly Actualités Africaines.
He received further training at the official Congo Information
Office and then at a Brussels school of journalism.
During that period, Mobutu met Patrice Lumumba and became his
representative in Belgium, while reportedly serving as an
informer for the Belgian security police. Lumumba brought him
back to the Congo in 1960, made him a presidential aide, and
raised him to the rank of colonel and chief of staff of the
Congolese army.
Within 2 months of his appointment, Mobutu used his position to
unseat Lumumba and to install the College of Commissioners, made
up of graduate students (Sept. 20, 1960). Mobutu consolidated
his hold over a segment of the army, particularly over a
commando battalion which he organized with the help of a
right-wing Moroccan general serving in the UN force, turning it
into a praetorian guard to control the capital city. He was
instrumental in the decision to turn Lumumba over to the Katanga
regime and thus bears a major responsibility for the death of
the man who had been his political protector.
Thereafter, Mobutu concentrated his efforts on reunifying the
fragmented army under his command and even managed to have Moïse
Tshombe subscribe to his nominal paramountcy over Katanga forces
after securing his release from the brief captivity into which
the secessionist leader had allowed himself to be ensnared
(June-July 1961).
Although civilian rule was officially restored in August 1961
under Premier Cyrille Adoula, Mobutu remained a major power
broker. The army's position - and indirectly that of Mobutu -
became seriously weakened as a result of its disastrous
performance in attempting to control the Congo rebellion in
1963-1965. When Tshombe returned to the Congo as prime minister,
Mobutu supported his decision to make use of foreign military
support (foreign technicians had in any case been working with
the Congolese army since 1960); and he maintained this position
when Joseph Kasavubu, sensing international hostility to the
presence of white mercenaries in the Congo, announced his
intention to dismiss them in October 1965.
On Nov. 25, 1965, the army took power (officially for a period
of 5 years), and Mobutu became president. Rather than follow
Tshombe's policy of open subservience to Western interests,
however, Mobutu assumed - at least initially - a nationalistic
pose, rehabilitated Lumumba's memory, and challenged Belgian
economic control of the Katanga mining industry. His
confrontation with the Union Minière eventually led to a
face-saving compromise, and his attempts to organize a mass
party under the name of MPR (Mouvement Populaire de la
Révolution) turned out to be somewhat less than impressive, but
he was successful in beating back all attempts to unseat him.
Two such attempts (aiming at Tshombe's restoration) took the
form of mutiny by Katanga forces and white mercenaries, leading
to the latter group's final expulsion from the Congo at the end
of 1967. Thereafter, the Mobutu regime gradually inflected its
course in a conservative direction (as witnessed by the October
1968 execution of rebel leader Pierre Mulele, who had returned
to the Congo following assurances of amnesty) and had to face
growing disaffection and unrest on the part of student circles.
Diplomatically, Mobutu tried to strengthen the Congo's influence
on the African scene. He was consistently favorable to the
United States and indeed was often accused of rising to power
with CIA help and of being a Trojan horse for American influence
in central Africa. In December 1971 he changed his country's
name to Zaïre.
Like Stalin in the Soviet Union and Saddam Hussein in Iraq,
Mobutu consolidated his power by developing a cult of his own
personality. Pictures of him were printed by the tens of
thousands and sent to every part of the country. His every word
was recorded; his was the only official voice to speak for
Zaire; orchestrated crowds cheered his speeches; and the Zairian
media, all of it state censored, sang his praises and enlarged
his stature in an unceasing bombardment. As historian Michael
Schatzberg noted, "Scarcely a day passed when the press did not
hail even his most banal activities as the magnanimous paternal
gestures of a man intent only on the well being of his children,
the people of Zaire. Zairian television began its broadcasts
with a surrealistic vision of Mobutu descending from the
cloud-filled heavens."
Mobutu beat back threats from outside Zaire in the 1970s that
took the form of invasions from Shaba (formerly Katanga)
Province by rebels, some of whom were former Tshombe supporters
from the independence era; others were refugees from Mobutu's
terror. Mobutu almost lost control of the mining districts for a
while in 1978 during a second rebel offensive, and again was
forced to offer vocal anti-Communist sentiments in order to
obtain aid from American President Jimmy Carter, who was
repelled by Mobutu's cynical approach to human rights.
Mobutu mishandled his nation's economy almost from the
beginning. Once secure in power, he tried to exploit Zaire's
natural mineral riches, but he and his backers lacked the
personnel, infrastructure, and business ethos to make it work.
Even worse, his decision in 1973 to nationalize all other
economic assets owned by foreigners led to a catastrophic
decline in national productivity and wealth. Humiliated by his
financial woes, Mobutu returned farms and factories to their
original owners, but a fall in the world price of copper further
devastated the Zairian economy.
Through the 1980s and into the 1990s, Mobutu grew ever more
entrenched and corrupt and ever more suspicious of attempts to
liberalize his rule. He made some halfhearted concessions toward
free speech and democracy in the early '90s, but was unable to
yield any real power.
The 1994 genocide in Rwanda and the breakdown of order in
Burundi that began in 1993 indirectly helped cause Mobutu's
final downfall. More than one million refugees fled into Zaire's
eastern border regions, unsettling the local population and
reviving dormant feuds. Out of this uncertainty another
rebellion emerged led by the enigmatic Laurent Kabila. This
rebel movement proved surprisingly successful and in mid-1997
succeeded in pushing to the outskirts of the capital. Kabila
became president and changed the name of the country to the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. Mobutu, ailing with prostate
cancer (he had undergone surgery on August 22, 1996) fled with
his family and close supporters to Togo. On September 7, 1997,
about four months after he left the Congo, Mobutu died in
Morocco.
Mobutu's long hold on power had disastrous consequences for his
people. The Nigerian playwright Wole Soyinka referred to Mobutu
as Africa's leading "toad king," a monarchical ruler who lived
in grotesque splendor while his people starved. Mobutu's Zaire
was also the distressing model for novelist V.S. Naipaul's A
Bend in the River (1979), a chilling account of life in an
African dictatorship. Indeed, it would be hard to think of Zaire
under Mobutu as a developing country. Rather, it was a
deteriorating society held together only by the iron-fisted and
corrupt rule of its dictator.
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This web page was last updated on:
13 December, 2008
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