The case FOR the Congo
A response to There is No Congo, by Jeffrey Herbst and Greg Mills, posted March 2009, Web
Exclusive, http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/03/17/there_is_no_congo
by Ali M. Malau
Foreign Policy magazine recently published a rather disturbing article on
the Congo (
There is No Congo, posted March 2009, Web Exclusive, http://www.foreignpolicy.com),
by Jeffrey Herbst of Miami University of Ohio, and Greg Mills who directs the
Johannesburg-based Brenthurst Foundation. The article makes a case against
Congo as a unified entity. As a Congolese citizen, I could not disagree more
with their arguments, and I believe they warrant an appropriate rebuttal. Their
article is a perfect illustration of the flawed approach with which much of the
so-called international community, and some scholars on Africa, have analyzed
the situation in the Congo since its nominal independence in 1960, and frankly,
part of the reason why they never get it right. It is often not due to
inaccurate facts, or lack of knowledge on the region, but more due to
inadequate prisms molded in the inside-think of Western-world-centric academia.
In my view, and to illustrate some of the points I am rebutting, the article
boils down to the following citations:
" … And indeed, for centuries, this is precisely what Congo's
colonial occupiers, its neighbors, and even some of its people have done: eaten
away at Congo's vast mineral wealth with little concern for the coherency of
the country left behind. Congo has none of the things that make a nation-state:
interconnectedness, a government that is able to exert authority consistently
in territory beyond the capital, a shared culture that promotes national unity,
or a common language. Instead, Congo has become a collection of peoples,
groups, interests, and pillagers who coexist at best."
"The very concept of a Congolese
state has outlived its usefulness. For an international community that has far
too long made wishful thinking the enemy of pragmatism, acting on reality
rather than diplomatic theory would be a good start."
There is one general sense in this article that is right: the Congo has been
a disappointment. With the vast swathes of fauna, flora, mineral, agricultural,
hydroelectric, and human resources it inherited at its independence, one would
expect the Congo today to rival if not exceed such rising powers as South
Africa, Brazil, India, China, Korea, Singapore, Saudi Arabia or the UAE.
Instead, as the article justly points out, the level of deliquescence in Congo
today is almost unprecedented; not acknowledging that reality would be
intellectually dubious.
Nevertheless, what is equally dubious, is the misdiagnosis of the root
causes of the current situation. The authors of this article repeatedly, and I
believe questionably, confuse causes and consequences, to support and justify a
desire, long-held in certain circles, for the balkanization of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo. The authors point out the weakness of the Congolese
central state in governing the vast country, without fully and honestly
addressing the international geo-strategic reasons why that reality came to be.
The authors point out the various secessions and minor uprisings during the
past 40+ years to justify their diagnosis of the Congo. Yet they fail to shine
a light on the multiple foreign state and corporate backers that participated
in those early attempts at derailing the Congo. The authors claim that "
the Congolese government's inability to control its territory has
resulted in one of the world's longest and most violent wars", without
actually addressing the reasons why the government was - and still is - not
able to control its territory in the first place.
My contention is quite simple. The current conflict(s) in the Congo, the
deliquescence of the state, the lack of infrastructures and "
interconnectedness",
are not merely unforeseen, pathological consequences of bad colonial and/or
cold war policy gone awry. The current situation is a direct, calculated, and
progressively manufactured result of a long-standing operation by Western
nations to maintain a weak state in this vast mineral rich swath of land in the
heart of Africa and perpetuate the systematic plunder of Congo's resources by
various foreign interests, and their proxies in the local elite.
Seems far-fetched? Let us consider that, until proven otherwise, the Congo
is a sovereign country, recognized as such by International law, the United
Nations, and, in theory, every country on the planet. Yet despite that, over
the past five decades, these very countries, (including supposed champions of
the rule of law like The United States, Canada, Australia, the United Kingdom,
Belgium, France and South Africa), have allowed their mining companies (like
Banro, Freeport-McMoran, Anglo American, DeBeers, and others) to enter into
odious contracts with corrupt elements of the leadership in Kinshasa, and
worse, with murderous warlords, and near-genocidal militias, unhindered, and
unpunished. Furthermore, several of these very countries and their corporations
have provided the military, logistical and ideological support to the
secessionist regimes in the 60's and 70's, Rwanda, Uganda, Angola, their proxy
militias AND/OR their rival militias, thus destabilizing and creating a de
facto partition of the country, and further guaranteeing maximized profits
through cheap/slave/child labor under warlords. That is not happenstance, but
cold, calculated, predatory business planning. In fact, one only has to examine
the history of the ties between the Oppenheimer mining magnate family of South
Africa - which founded, and finances, the Brenthurst foundation that one of the
authors of
There is No Congo, Greg Mills, leads - and the various regimes
and rebellions we have seen in the Congo, to understand how integral these
foreign corporate and state interests are to the conduct of ANY business in the
Congo.
I contend that it is not so much that there is No Congo; nor is it that the
Congo as a country is not possible. I contend that since 1959, it was deemed
too much of a potential threat to several world and regional powers, and to the
coffers of their corporate acolytes, to allow the rise of a strong, large,
potential Brazil-type power, in the heart of Africa. And we can see why. Let us
consider the Congo today. Despite being one of the poorest, badly-managed
countries in the world, by virtue of its position and of its potential, the
country is poised - should there be a great deal of change in leadership - to
be a major guarantor of the development of a truly functional African
continent, and African Union.
As Herbst
and Mills themselves justly point out, "
the country is the region's
vortex ".
Former South African
President, Thabo Mbeki notes “There cannot be a new Africa without a new
Congo.” President Barack Obama himself rightly notes
“If Africa is to
achieve its promise resolving the problem in the Congo will be critical.”
Over the years, despite all the adversity the Congo faces, and despite the
desires they secretly harbor to see the Congo disintegrate to begin annexing
its pieces, its neighbors in the region were forced to recognize its central
and crucial position for the advent of further economic development for the
entire continent. As a result, despite currently being, admittedly, an economic
drag on all of them, the countries of Southern, Central, and Eastern Africa
have all secured some form of regional economic/political supranational
alliance with the Congo, whether through SADC, CEPGL, CEEAC or COMESA (all
groups that constitute regional clusters in the building of the larger African
Union).
There lies the issue for this country. Left to its own devices, a big,
strong, unified Congo would be a powerful engine for the development, and the
industrialization of the entire continent. Herbst and Mills, I believe justly
state that "
economically, the various outlying parts of Congo are
better integrated with their neighbors than with the rest of the country."
But that is not in Congo's disfavor. Whether in terms of its abundant precious
and strategic minerals, the tremendous amount of renewable energy that could be
generated by the Inga dam project on the Congo river, the natural gas in Lake
Kivu or the geo-thermal potential of the volcanic mountains in the east, the
second lung of our planet that is its rainforest, or the extraordinary - and
exhaustively demonstrated - resilience of its people, the Congo has everything
to be the central pillar around which Africa rises. Should the people of the
Congo find a way to build the infrastructure to interconnect its outlying
parts, the country would instantly become the key piece in regional
development. That prospect has always unsettled many, whose interests might not
be as well served should there be a strong government, a functioning army and
police, and rule of law.
Herbst and Mills claim that "
the very concept of a Congolese state
has outlived its usefulness." When was it ever truly - and
democratically - implemented, I ask? When, since 1885, have the affairs of the
Congo ever truly been left to the Congolese people? See, I contend that the
Congo has, intentionally, never even been given a fighting chance to live up to
its potential. Its challenge since 1885 has been both an internal and external
one. Under colonial rule, the people were voluntarily under-educated, and the
infrastructure built was limited to basic transportation needs for minerals,
and the comfort of colons. Under Mobutu, the regime, backed by Western powers,
ruled with an iron fist, promoted corruption, allowed the deliquescence of the
already meager infrastructure and mining industry, and progressively engineered
a weakening of the state apparatus, the army and the police, in order to
strengthen and impose Mobutu's personal rule, and better protect the mechanisms
of the systematic plundering of the country's resources. The Congo today is the
result of a systematic, documented, and fully reversible process of
manufactured under-development, with roots in colonial and neo-colonial
policies, but more importantly, in greed. Fomenting and perpetuating misery,
turmoil, tribalism, destructive autocratic rule, and angling for the
"Somalization" of the Congo, was more profitable to key greedy
domestic elites and foreign groups, and more dependable for key foreign powers,
than actually allowing this country to build the infrastructure it needed - and
still needs - to succeed.
That is a far more accurate prism to consider the events that have befallen
the Congo over the decades. It explains the secession of Katanga, the mineral
rich southern province, only 7 days after independence in 1960, with the help
of Belgium, the very colonial power the people of the entire country had just
successfully sought to get rid of. It also explains the assassination of the
first democratically elected Prime Minister, Patrice E. Lumumba, with, at the
very least, the tacit backing of Belgium and the United States. It explains,
for instance, the documented contacts between the Oppenheimer family of South
Africa and Albert Kalonji Mulopwe, the "Emperor" of the secessionist
South-Kasai, Moise Tshombe, leader of the Katanga secession, and rebel groups
of more recent years. Finally, and most tragically, it explains how the Congo's
neighbors - Rwanda, Uganda, and to some degree Angola, their proxy militias,
their rival militias, and corrupt elements of the so-called leadership of the
Congo and their militias, have been not only allowed by the international
community, but backed and supported primarily by the United States and Britain:
- to systematically destroy,
ransack and plunder an entire country, unhindered and unpunished;
- to brutally rape and sexually
terrorize tens of thousands of women in front of their sons, fathers and
husbands, unhindered and unpunished;
- to turn children into
soldiers, unhindered and unpunished;
- and to cause the death of
nearly 6 million people - a scale for another century - to this day,
seamlessly, unhindered and unpunished.
All the above has been accomplished in blatant violation of every principle
of International Law, and every principle of human decency, and in full view of
the inadequately-led, inadequately-sized, ineffective, inept, overhyped,
overpriced and overpaid so-called "largest United Nations peacekeeping
force" (MONUC), and with logistical support from Western powers, and
recently, the dreaded AFRICOM of the United States. Herbst and Mills argue that
"
the international community does not have the will or the resources to
construct a functional Congo"? It seems more accurate to say that over
the years, the international community has been - more or less intentionally -
actively, and systematically undermining a functional Congo. It is for this
reason that Antonio Guterres, High-commissioner of the UNCHR reminded us in his
interview with the Financial Times, in January 2008, that we must not forget
that “the international community has systematically looted the Congo” and that
is a far different and, in my opinion, far more easily remediable problem.
The ultimate solution to the Congolese situation lies in investing on a key
element that Herbst and Mills discount too quickly, and wrongly so: the
Congolese people, its sense of citizenship, and its resilience. Through all the
humiliations of colonialism and dictatorships, the scheming, the gaming, the
profiteering, the raping, the oppression, the daily humiliations of poverty,
the hunger, the injustice, the corruption, the tribalism and the morbid reality
of living in a needlessly war-torn country, the Congolese people have emerged
as quite the resilient people, AND quite the cohesive people; at least as
cohesive as can be expected for any multi-cultural people, whether in the
Congo, in South Africa, or in the United States. Congo may yet have "
none
of the things that make a nation-state", but I contend that you would
be hard-pressed to find a Congolese citizen, rural or urban, who does not
identify with the Congolese nation, and the
"boundaries that the king
of Belgium helped establish in 1885 ".
Yes, the lack of infrastructures makes the task to establish and solidify
the regal functions of a strong, centralized state on the entire territory,
unusually daunting. But the Congo is not the first, and will certainly not be
the last, multi-cultural nation, that has to, in its formative years, struggle
with translating their sense of national identity into stable, and accepted
state institutions. It may be hard, but the argument that it is not worth
thriving for, fighting for, and supporting, is simply untenable; especially coming
from two scholars from the two countries in the world - the United States and
South Africa - that symbolize the most (and I admire them for that) the
possibility of overcoming tremendous and varying odds to build united and
strong countries, that combine multi-cultural peoples, and effective,
democratic states. Maybe the Congolese can learn from them, and Brazil, and
India, and establish a strong, but truly federal state. When the Congo's
affairs are left to the Congolese people, the possibilities are endless.
Now, that is definitely not to say it will be a cakewalk. The Congo we
envision, thrive and advocate for is possible, but it will entail a great deal
of work and investment from the Congolese people. Those in the “learned class”
– economists, agronomists, engineers, teachers, doctors, etc - that have
managed to maintain their integrity by not partaking in the plunder of the
Congo, will have to outgrow this sense of cynicism, hopelessness and apathy
that has seeped into their consciousness due to years of despair and lack of
prospects for change, and roll-up their sleeves. The Congolese will need to
revitalize the education sector, so as to ensure that the coming generations
have access to the knowledge they need to continue the task of rebuilding their
country. They will also need to organize education/training initiatives for
urban and rural adults, in various fields, among which – and most importantly –
sustainable agriculture, construction, urbanization, sanitation, and salubrity.
They will need to reinforce notions of civics, citizenship, human rights, civil
and civic rights, law and order, and respect for women, which years of
oppression and mis-education, of Leopoldism, colonialism, Mobutism and other
-isms have caused to somewhat crumble away in the general consciousness.
Finally, on a national level, they will need to seek worthy partners to do all
the above, and also begin the work of reconnecting the Congo to the main grids
of modern technology, starting with the electrification of the country, through
the rehabilitation and completion of the Inga hydroelectric complex. The task
is not complex for the Congolese people; it is simply tedious. The
prescriptions we put forth imply a laborious, time-consuming but necessary
grassroots work, that needs to start yesterday, but is absolutely achievable.
And given a true opportunity, I believe the Congolese people are up to the
task.
So, instead of giving up on the Congo, and dismissing it as an irredeemable
failure, I say let the Congo and its people truly amaze you. Give the Congo a
fighting chance. It is quite simple, really. Intel, Nokia, Dell, T-Mobile, IBM,
Banro, Freeport-McMoran, Anglo American, Chevron, Tullow and all the other
companies identified in the Financial Times and United Nations Reports from
2001 – 2003, that romp through Congo for coltan, cassiterite, tin cobalt, gold,
diamonds, oil, etc, should cease and desist from buying minerals illegally from
warlords, from neighboring countries that have looted our resources, or through
odious or illegal contracts. By all means, invest in Congo, but be deliberate
and intentional about doing it through the proper channels. Stop financing and
arming warlords. All people of goodwill should discourage the Congo's neighbors
from meddling in its affairs and support and finance education and healthcare
institutions. Support local institutions, and help the civil society hold the
central government, the provincial governments and the security forces truly
accountable.
And finally this time, this time, help the Congolese ensure that they
conduct truly free, fair, transparent and democratic elections in 2011. The
International Crisis Group's 2007 report "Congo: Consolidating the
Peace", shows quite clearly that the last time around, the International
community was more concerned about access to lucrative mining contracts as
opposed to a democratic process that would reflect the interests of the people.
Let us all thrive to prevent a repetition of that. The Congolese have an
imperfect constitution, with imperfect prescriptions, and imperfect
institutions, but they are all theirs to perfect. Let the Congolese people
choose its own leaders, and manage its own territory. Give them the chance they
have never had: to demonstrate their capacity to be a viable nation, and
establish for themselves a state that helps their country live up to its full
potential. Is that really a concept that has outlived its usefulness? I dare
think not.
Ali Malau is a adviser to The Friends of the Congo (FOTC), a 501 (c) 3
tax-exempt advocacy organization based in Washington, DC.
The FOTC was established at the behest of Congolese human rights and
grassroots institutions in 2004, to work together to bring about peaceful and
lasting change in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Ali Malau can be contacted at ali@friendsofthecongo.org
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