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http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/jan2002/lumu-j16.shtml

The unquiet death of Patrice Lumumba
By Bill Vann
16 January 2002
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January 17 marks the forty-first anniversary of the brutal
assassination of Patrice Lumumba. The murder of the leader of the
Congolese independence struggle and one of the most impassioned
critics of the colonial oppression of Africa continues to haunt
governments in both Europe and America.

In November, an all-party commission of inquiry formed by the
Belgian government released a report acknowledging that Belgium
played a role in the murder of the Congolese leader.

The admission was far too little and came far too late. The Belgian
government decided to launch the commission as a show of repentance
for past crimes. Its aim was to smooth the way for increased
involvement in its former African colony following the fall of the
Mobutu dictatorship and to improve its bargaining position
vis-à-vis the United States, its principal economic rival in the
region.

“If we want to engage in frank dialogue with our former colonial
partners, then we have to also consider some painful periods from
our colonial past,” said a Foreign Ministry spokesman of the
commission’s findings.

At the same time, the limited admissions served as a means of
whitewashing the growing revelations about the assassination in the
last few years, in both the book by Flemish historian Ludo de Witte
published two years ago, De Moord Op Lumumba, and by journalists
who interviewed Belgian officers and soldiers who participated in
the killing.

Focus has been further brought to the assassination by the recent
film Lumumba, directed by Raoul Peck, which recreated the horrific
murder.

The film begins with the nightmarish scene of Belgian soldiers
unearthing the remains of the Congolese leader and one of his
comrades who were shot to death by a firing squad just days before.
Determined to deny supporters of Congolese liberation even a corpse
around which they could rally, the order was given to obliterate
every physical trace of Lumumba. Thus, with axes, saws, acid and
fire—along with ample quantities of whisky to dull their senses—the
soldiers set about their grisly task.

The commission’s report concluded that authorities in Brussels and
Belgium’s King Baudouin knew of plans to kill Lumumba and did
nothing to save him. It insisted, however, that there is no
documentary evidence that Belgium ordered the Congolese leader’s
death.

It did acknowledge that the government covertly channeled funds and
arms to regional secessionist groups within the Congo that were
violently opposed to Lumumba. The report put much of the blame on
Baudouin, who died, in 1993, alleging that the King pursued his own
post-colonial policy behind the backs of elected officials. Some
parties within the Belgian government have responded by calling for
a debate on the future of the royal family.

In fact, earlier investigations have uncovered ample proof that the
assassination of Lumumba was the direct result of orders given by
the Belgian government and the Eisenhower administration, acting
through the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and local clients
financed and “advised” by Brussels and Washington.

De Witte’s book cited a telegram sent three months before Lumumba’s
death from Count Harold d’Aspremont Lynden, then minister for
African affairs, to Belgian officials in the Congo:

“The main aim to pursue in the interests of the Congo, Katanga and
Belgium is clearly Lumumba’s definitive elimination,” said the
memorandum. Given that the Congolese leader had already been
deposed from power and placed under house arrest at the time, there
was no mistaking the meaning of these words.

Similar revelations have surfaced from the US side. Last year, the
government released archive material related to the Kennedy
assassination that included an interview with the White House
minute-taker under the Eisenhower administration, Robert Johnson.

In a meeting held with security advisers in August 1960, two months
after Congo achieved its formal independence from Belgium,
Eisenhower ordered the CIA to “eliminate” Lumumba, according to
Johnson’s account.

“There was a stunned silence for about 15 seconds and the meeting
continued,” Johnson recalled.

The CIA’s director, Allen Dulles, referred to the Congolese leader
as a “mad dog.”

Among the American agents on the ground in the Congo was a young
CIA man working under diplomatic cover, Frank Carlucci, who tried
to work his way into Lumumba’s confidence in the months before the
murder. Carlucci went on to become national security advisor and
defense secretary in the Reagan administration and is today the
chairman of the Carlyle Group, the influential merchant bank that
includes George Bush Sr. among its directors.

According to Larry Devlin, then the CIA station chief in
Leopoldville (Kinshasa), the agency’s chief technical officer
arrived in the African nation shortly after the “elimination” order
from Eisenhower. With him he brought a tube of poisoned toothpaste
that was to be placed in the Congolese leader’s bathroom. The
improbable plot was dropped, however, in favor of a more direct
method. Lumumba was delivered into the hands of his bitterest
political enemy, Moises Tshombe, the secessionist leader of
Katanga.

The assassination took place less than seven months after the Congo
had declared its independence, with Lumumba as its first prime
minister.

Lumumba was among the most courageous and principled figures in a
generation of young nationalist leaders who came forward in the
second half of the twentieth century to claim freedom from European
colonialism.

These forces were ill prepared for the challenge of leading the
immense eruption of social struggle that swept the continent.
Moreover, both those who were murdered, like Lumumba, and those who
survived were handed a poison chalice by the old colonial powers in
the form of the arbitrary borders that they had drawn in the
nineteenth century scramble to divide and conquer Africa.

In the Congo, in particular, Belgian colonialism had deliberately
kept the African population untrained and uneducated, reduced to
the status of beasts of burden for the extractive industries that
looted the country’s vast mineral and other natural wealth.

On the eve of independence, the Congo, a territory larger than
Western Europe, was seriously underdeveloped. There were no African
army officers, only three African managers in the entire civil
service, and only 30 university graduates. Yet Western investments
in Congo’s mineral resources (uranium, copper, gold, tin, cobalt,
diamonds, manganese, zinc) were colossal. These investments meant
that the West was determined to keep control over the country
beyond independence. The Belgians organized the transfer of power
in deliberate manner to ensure that “independence” would at best be
a formal fiction.

Following widespread rioting and strikes in 1959, the colonial
power surprised all of the nationalist leaders by scheduling
elections for May 1960. In a chaotic rush to take advantage of the
fruits of independence, 120 different parties were formed, most of
them regionally or ethnically based. Only one, the Mouvement
National Congolais or the MNC, led by Lumumba, favored a
centralized government and a Congo united across ethnic and
regional lines.

Lumumba’s rise and fall was meteoric. Plucked from a Belgian
colonial jail where he was beaten and tortured for advocating
independence, he was flown to Brussels to participate in
round-table discussions that were aimed at smoothing the way to a
peaceful and smooth transition to a regime that would leave
Belgium’s financial interests in the Congo intact, while
transferring the trappings of state power from the white
colonialists to a new native elite.

Peck’s film Lumumba acutely captures the immense social
contradictions underlying the independence movement and the class
position of Africa’s new petty-bourgeois nationalist rulers. A
scene portrays Lumumba’s speech before the independence day
celebrations attended by the Belgian king and his ministers as well
as the collection of black opportunist politicians into whose hands
Belgium intended to entrust the new independent state.

In the midst of a ceremony in which the Belgians had congratulated
themselves on successfully civilizing the Congolese and preparing
them for self-rule, Lumumba spelled out in graphic terms the
reality of colonial oppression, describing it as 80 years of
“humiliating slavery which was imposed upon us by force”:

“We have known harassing work, exacted in exchange for salaries
which did not permit us to eat enough to drive away hunger, to
clothe ourselves, or to house ourselves decently, or to raise our
children as creatures dear to us.... We have known ironies,
insults, blows that we endured morning, noon and night, because we
are negroes.... We have seen our lands seized in the name of
allegedly legal laws, which in fact recognized only that might is
right.... We will never forget the massacres where so many
perished, the cells into which those who refused to submit to a
regime of oppression and exploitation were thrown.”

Pecks camera cuts between the stunned anger on the faces of the
Belgians listening to this speech and the elation of crowds of
Africans gathered around radios cheering Lumumba’s courage to
honestly portray their existence.

Lumumba’s forthright demands for economic independence, social
justice and political self-determination, and his hostility to a
political setup based upon tribal divisions, which the colonialists
had effectively used to divide and rule Africa, sealed his fate.
His threat to appeal for Soviet aid as a last resort in his effort
to free the country of the continuing domination of the Belgian
mining interests and Belgian troops, who continued to intervene in
the aftermath of independence, gave Washington the pretext for
allying with the old colonial power in seeking his elimination.

Within days of independence, the political situation in the Congo
spiraled out of control. Black troops mutinied against Belgian
officers. Katanga province, the main mining region, declared itself
a separate state under Tshombe, who acted under the protection of
Western mining interests and the Belgian military. Belgium sent its
army back into the former colony, with the alleged aim of
protecting its nationals. Lumumba invited in UN peacekeeping
forces, but they too subordinated themselves to the machinations of
Belgium and the US, refusing to take any action to prevent the
murder of the new prime minister.

While Tshombe became prime minister after Lumumba’s murder, his
reign did not last long. In 1965, Joseph Mobutu, the Congolese army
leader who handed Lumumba over to his executioners, staged a
bloodless coup, inaugurating a 32-year dictatorship which was
legendary for its corruption and greed. This “kleptocracy,” which
renamed the territory Zaire, became Washington’s closest ally on
the continent and served as a staging area for its
counterrevolutionary interventions against liberation movements in
southern Africa.

After his death, Lumumba was transformed into a harmless icon of
African liberation and third world politics. Even Mobutu, who had
engineered his death, paid homage to the former leader, as did the
Soviet Stalinist bureaucracy, which named its premier international
university after him.

In fact, the Soviets had little intention of helping Lumumba. Its
presence and interest in Africa was never as strong as the West
maintained—in order to justify its own neo-colonialist
strategies—or as Moscow itself pretended to promote its image as a
champion of national liberation. Where it did intervene, it was not
to further social revolution, but to improve its bargaining
position vis-à-vis US imperialism as part of its Cold War policy of
peaceful coexistence. Thus, it could provide aid to Angola against
apartheid South Africa’s military aggression, at the same time that
it buttressed a brutal military dictatorship in Ethiopia that
plunged the entire Horn of Africa into desperate crisis.

Above all, Peck’s film Lumumba bleakly portrays the new Congolese
prime minister as isolated, trapped in a set of political
conspiracies that he cannot escape. Born in Haiti, Peck spent time
as a youth in the Congo, where his father worked as a teacher. He
is sympathizer of Pan Africanism and has repeatedly said that he
made the film above all to present Lumumba’s story to an African
audience. He accurately presents all of the forces aligned against
the nationalist prime minister, from the CIA agents cultivating his
military chief, Mobutu, to the Belgian colonialists and military
officers and the treacherous set of grasping African politicians.

But what he is unable to see or explain is what social forces were
at work within the new regime. Lumumba was unable to counter the
enemies arrayed against him because, in the final analysis, he too
was balancing between the imperialists on the one hand and the
oppressed African masses on the other.

The murder of Lumumba was part of a political process that unfolded
throughout sub-Saharan Africa in which the dreams of masses of
workers, peasants and poor for revolutionary social change were
cruelly betrayed.

The petty-bourgeois nationalist elites that came to power with
decolonization were content to accept the legacy offered them by
colonialism, laying hold of the state institutions and national
boundaries created by the European powers in their conquest of
Africa.

The formal granting of state independence nowhere in Africa
represented in any fundamental sense the realization of the
democratic aspirations of the African masses. Even in those areas
where the end of colonialism was the product of armed struggle,
state independence merely provided a cover for the continued
dominance of imperialism over the masses of the former colonies,
with corrupt national bourgeois cliques using the state to enrich
themselves at the expense of any social progress.

While Lumumba’s brutal assassination turned him into a martyr of
Western imperialist aggression in Africa, those whom he had
emulated, from Nyere to Nkrumah and Kenyatta, presided over corrupt
regimes that gave way to military dictatorships and police-state
regimes in the service of the international banks and foreign
capital.

The Congo itself, 41 years after Lumumba’s assassination, provides
the starkest confirmation of the thoroughly reactionary character
of the national bourgeoisie. Mobutu was overthrown in 1997, after
his debt-ridden regime had outlived its usefulness to Washington
with the end of the Cold War. His successor, Laurent Kabila, was in
turn assassinated, replaced by his son Joseph, who has sought to be
even more accommodating to Western financial interests.

In the course of three years of civil war, more than 2.5 million
Congolese have died, most of them women and children who have
fallen victim to hunger and disease. The armies of neighboring
African regimes—Rwanda, Uganda on one side and Zimbabwe on the
other—have intervened in the country’s civil war, ostensibly for
reasons of political sympathy and regional security. In fact, they
have merely emulated the historical role of Western colonialism,
illegally appropriating and exploiting mining facilities to enrich
military officers and their political and business cronies in the
three countries.

There is no way out of the desperate social and economic crisis
gripping the Congo and the entire African continent under the
leadership of the national bourgeoisie and the domination of the
Western banks and transnationals. The ideals of democratic
freedoms, economic progress and social justice that inspired masses
of Congolese and other Africans in the struggle against colonialism
more than four decades ago will be realized only through the
forging of a new movement to unite the African working class with
that of Europe, America and the rest of the world based on the
program of international socialism.



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