“Never Betray Congo”: A warning to the SADC Summit
By Aditi Lalbahadur
August 18, 2017
2
Share:

South Africa and Angola’s leaders may be preoccupied with domestic
events, but they ignore Congo at the region’s peril.

South Africa's Jacob Zuma (left) and Angola's Jose Eduardo Dos Santos
(centre) enjoy good relations with DRC's Joseph Kabila (right).
Credit: GCIS.

This weekend, as the Southern African Development (SADC) heads of
state meet in Pretoria to discuss developments in the region, they
will do so under new stewardship from Angola and South Africa. Angola
will assume leadership of the Organ on Politics Defence and Security
Cooperation (OPDSC). South Africa assumes overall chairmanship.

More than any of the other 13 SADC members, these two countries have
an instrumental role to play in influencing a positive outcome for the
people of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). President José
Eduardo dos Santos and President Jacob Zuma Africa both enjoy good
relationships with President Joseph Kabila, which they have leveraged
to engage the Congo on related issues through the International
Conference on the Great Lakes (ICGLR).

However, both Angola and South Africa are currently facing seismic
domestic shifts that are likely to distract them from unfolding events
in the DRC. On 23 August – just days after the Summit – Angolans will
go to the polls, following which President dos Santos is expected to
step down after 38 years in office. Power is likely to transfer to
long-time dos Santos supporter and ruling MPLA stalwart João Lourenço.
But uncertainty remains around how the new president is likely to deal
with the dynastic power of the first family, who occupy strategic
positions of wealth and authority over the country’s resources.

[Angola’s ruling family is worth billions. What happens when dad steps down?]

In South Africa, President Zuma’s position has never been more
precarious. On 8 August, he survived his eighth vote of no confidence
– performed for the first time by secret ballot – with the narrowest
margin yet. The final tally shows significant party dissent as
approximately 15% of ruling African National Congress (ANC) MPs voted
for the motion.

The ANC is fractured, and factional infighting is likely to ramp up
ahead of the party’s elective conference in December that will decide
Zuma’s successor. Many analysts doubt he will remain South Africa’s
president for much longer after that.

[Why Zuma’s eventual departure won’t solve South Africa’s woes]
Tragedy imminent

In spite of these pressing developments, it is imperative that
regional leaders not lose sight of the fact that tragedy is once again
imminent in the DRC.

Amidst opposition calls for President Kabila to hold elections – meant
to have been staged in 2016 – Congolese citizens continue to pay with
their lives. In September 2016, 50 people in Kinshasa died in clashes
with police protesting the announcement that government would not hold
elections that year. Now, in August 2017, reports are circulating
about the deaths of 14 people –branded as secessionist rebels from the
group Bundu dia Kongo – at the hands of state security forces in the
capital.

More frighteningly, a mounting humanitarian crisis has been developing
in the Kasai region bordering Angola. The UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights released a report in early-August, which found that more
than 250 people, including 62 children, were killed in the DRC between
mid-March and mid-June, mainly in Kasai.

[Don’t look away now: DR Congo is at greatest risk than for years]

In a ministerial mission to DRC in April 2017, the SADC Troika – the
three-member leadership – of the OPDSC did little more than release a
statement, which “condemned the escalation of violence and insecurity
in the Kasai Provinces…and encouraged the Government to strengthen the
capacity and presence of local state institutions”.

In the same release, SADC ministers congratulated President Kabila for
his efforts in pushing the political process forward. Yet by July, the
head of DRC’s electoral body was announcing that the government would
not be holding elections as promised by December 2017.

[Slippage in the DR Congo: Where are the UN and South Africa?]

For all its rhetoric of furthering regional integration, encouraging
multilateralism and building strong institutions, SADC is still
largely driven by the will of individual political leaders. If South
Africa and Angola give in to their pressing domestic circumstances, it
minimises the opportunities for proactive engagement in preventing a
political crisis in the region come December. The regional
organisation must take a greater interest in the unfolding events in
the DRC and in overcoming the impasse regarding the handover of power
from Kabila. A peaceful outcome is necessary not just for the DRC but
the entire region.

As SADC leaders meet to discuss developments in the Congo this
weekend, let them be reminded of the words presiding over former
President Laurent Kabila’s Mausoleum in Kinshasa: “Ne Jamais Trahir le
Congo”. Never Betray Congo. The world, and the Congo, is watching.

-- 
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/d/forum/southsudankob
View this message at 
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/southsudankob/topic-id/message-id
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"South Sudan Info - The Kob" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/SouthSudanKob.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/SouthSudanKob/CAJb14opdTXU91WANxfcqKu%2BppyRRh6hPsVQ%2BG2hdzUQdJtTksA%40mail.gmail.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to