Lucha continua: The youth movement striking fear into Congo’s elite

By Ruby Bantariza, Tim Hirschel-Burns & Sophia Schuster
May 31, 2017
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Neither an NGO nor a political party, Lucha has mobilised in
innovative ways to ensure young people’s voices are heard in DRC’s
tense environment.

Lucha protest, DR Congo

The youth group mostly organises locally but its nation-wide actions
have drawn more attention. Credit: Lucha RDC.

Five years ago in the eastern Congo, a group of friends from the
University of Goma were rushing home in the heavy rain when their
journey was interrupted. They saw that the streets ahead were flooded
and they couldn’t pass.

Furious that the government could not provide even the most basic
drainage systems, they decided there and then to take matters into
their own hands. As they sheltered from the downpour, they founded a
new kind of grassroots movement that would push for reforms. They
called it Lutte pour le Changement (“Struggle for Change”).

No one seems completely sure whether this origin story is true or not.
But since its founding, that organisation – now better known by its
abbreviation “Lucha” – has become one of the greatest threats to the
country’s political status quo today.

Neither an NGO nor a political party, the movement positions itself
outside traditional civil society. It organises non-violently at both
the local and national level. And it has taken part in organising
widespread protests, sometimes leading to high-profile arrests of its
members.

It turned five years old this month.
Organising for change

Lucha pushes for reform all the way up to the presidency, but it most
actively engages at the community level. Its local activities
generally take the form of popular education or protests.

In Goma, for example, Lucha has organised sit-ins to call for
increased access to clean water, pushed for the construction of a road
to Sake in the face of repeated construction halts, and protested
mismanagement in the banking sector.

[Sex, whistles and shutdowns: Inside Africa’s non-protesters’
protesting toolbox]

Through these actions, it has managed to thrust important issues onto
the political agenda.

“This is an important organisation in terms of popular consciousness”,
says Jason Stearns, director of the Congo Research Group, though he
adds that “it is not very big in terms of capacity for mobilisation.”

However, while it remains young and relatively small, Lucha is growing
and spreading with each day. The movement now has branches in all
major Congolese cities, with each seeking to improve its own community
in addition to coordinating with other Lucha divisions on
wider-ranging issues.

The movement has approximately 1,000 active participants across the
country, though membership is often fluid and informal. This
followership is impressively gender-balanced for a major Congolese
organisation and is largely made up of people in their 20s.

Most supporters are educated and work in the formal sector, suggesting
the organisation is not particularly diverse in terms of class. But
the group notes that some demographics are harder to mobilise than
others.

With 63% of the country under 25-years-old, young people represent a
major political force in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Lucha
is the largest of the organisations harnessing this momentum and works
alongside other youth groups such as Filimbi and Quatrième Voix.

[Hungry for change: the economics underlying DR Congo’s political crisis]

For many members of Lucha, it is the group’s unique structure and
ethos – which stands in stark contrast to the frustrating mode of
elite politics that has long dominated the country – that attracts
them.

“For once I feel like there are people who think like me, who believe
that they are the first actor of the change they want to see,” says
Lucha member Soraya Aziz Souleymane. “It’s not about money. It’s not
about receiving funds from USAID or DfID or whatever. It’s really
leadership with values, and I think we lack that.”
Kabila continuing

While Lucha’s main activities may be focused locally, it is its
national-level work that has gained it the most attention.

As it has become clear over the past couple years that President
Joseph Kabila is unwilling to step down despite his official mandate
expiring in December 2016, members of Lucha have played a central role
in pushing back.

In January 2015, a wave of protests against perceived attempts by
Kabila to extend his rule led to 43 deaths. That March, the government
raided a pro-democracy workshop in Kinshasa and carried out mass
arrests.

Among those detained were Lucha members Fred Bauma and Yves
Makwambala, who were held for nearly a year and a half before being
freed. During that time, their plight attracted the attention of
international human rights bodies and Western media, who called for
their release and helped raise Lucha’s profile.

In the protests that continued through 2015 and 2016, dozens more
demonstrators were killed by police and more Lucha members were
arrested.

As 2017 approached and Kabila still showed no signs of leaving power,
Congo braced itself for more violence. But on 31 December 2016, the
Catholic Church brokered a deal between the ruling party and
opposition. It agreed that elections would be held by the end of 2017,
after which Kabila would step down.

This averted greater turmoil at the time, but recent events suggest
that the Kabila is unlikely to honour the agreement. Little headway
has been made in arranging elections. The opposition accuses the
president of violating the deal in the way he created the transitional
government. And the Catholic Church has pulled out of the
negotiations, claiming insufficient commitment to the deal from both
the ruling party and opposition.

[Congo Come Back! Why we’re building a new political movement in DRC]

[Don’t look away now: DR Congo is at greatest risk than for years]
“We are not naive”

In this tense and uncertain environment, Lucha continues to mobilise.
This March, for instance, activists in Lubumbashi staged a sit-in
protest outside UN offices demanding it intervene in the
implementation of the 31 December agreement.

In April, members marched in Kinshasa against the filthy state of the
capital. 23 protesters were arrested and told by the city’s governor
that they could only be released if they removed their Lucha-branded
t-shirts.

How the youth movement will continue to keep up pressure and build
momentum over the coming months remains to be seen. Lucha will need to
continue to manage the tricky balance between engaging in politics and
preserving its integrity.

According to Stearns, “some members of Lucha internally wanted to
become a political party, wanted people to run for government. That
was not the position of the central committee.”

Indeed, members such as Souleymane express deep misgivings about the
Congo’s more typical modes of political engagement and the individuals
within them.

“We do not trust the political opposition. We don’t trust them at all.
They purposely sabotaged the momentum we had to kick Kabila out,” she
says, believing that the opposition saw currying favour with Kabila as
an opportunity for political and financial gain. “We also don’t trust
the traditional civil society.”

This suggests that Lucha is destined to remain outside of conventional
spheres where it is better protected from corruption and co-optation.
This also means, however, that its influence in the highest echelons
of power will remain limited. For example, the movement demands that
Kabila steps down, but staying out of opposition politics means that
the next president will also be a figure Lucha does not trust.

For the movement though, this is not a contradiction. Instead, they
see their work as part of a long-term process of building government
accountability.

“Our hope is not that the next president will bring terrific change.
It will not solve all the social issues Congo has,” says Souleymane.
“We are not naive. We know this will not happen just after this next
election.

“Maybe in 50 years, because leaders are becoming more accountable, we
will see changes on the ground, and in 50 years we will be on our good
way to development.”

Despite their recognition of the challenges ahead, Lucha’s young
membership maintains an immense sense of hope. If the past five years
of Lucha’s rapid emergence and momentum in mobilising both locally and
around the country can be continued, it may be justified.

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