John Campbell

Africa in Transition

Campbell tracks political and security developments across sub-Saharan Africa.

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Congo-Kinshasa: The Other Shoe Hasn’t Dropped – Yet

by John Campbell
January 9, 2012

Supporters of incumbent President Joseph Kabila are seen celebrating through a banner with his image after provisional election results are announced in Democratic Republic of Congo's capital Kinshasa, December 9, 2011.  (Stringer/Courtesy Reuters) Supporters of incumbent President Joseph Kabila are seen celebrating through a banner with his image after provisional election results are announced in Democratic Republic of Congo's capital Kinshasa, December 9, 2011. (Stringer/Courtesy Reuters)

For Africa watchers, this morning’s attention is focused on Nigeria. Over the weekend, murder of Christians continued, ostensibly by an Islamic radical group, Boko Haram. Various ‘Christian’ spokesmen have threatened retaliation against Muslims and mosques have been attacked. But, in some areas, there are grassroots efforts to forestall religious conflict, with Christians protecting Muslims while they pray and Muslims guarding Christian churches. While the nation has gone on strike, President Goodluck Jonathan sought to mollify public anger at his elimination of the fuel subsidy, including by cutting government salaries (including his own). Preliminary reports are that the strike has shut-down Lagos, Abuja, and Kano and protestor deaths are being reported from Lagos and Kano. I have heard nothing from Port Harcourt and the oil patch except that police allegedly prevented a protest from taking place in Bayelsa state. Personalities ranging from the president to literary icon Chinua Achebe are saying that the current situation recalls the run-up to the 1967-70 Biafra war. But, information is too incomplete, and too much is in flux for meaningful comment today.

So, instead of Nigeria, I want to return the focus to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and the aftermath of the November presidential elections. To recap: the incumbent, Joseph Kabila, defeated challenger Etienne Tshisekedi in elections characterized as “too flawed to be credible” by international and domestic observers, including the Roman Catholic Church, which had some thirty thousand observers in the field. The DRC supreme court, seen as in the pocket of Kabila, upheld the incumbent’s victory. Tshisekedi bitterly contested the announced results, and went so far as to have himself sworn in as president at about the same time as Kabila’s ceremony. The stage appeared to be set for a major clash that could re-ignite civil war.

Yet, as of now, little has happened. The international community, with little stomach for further intervention in Congo, restricted itself to calling for “dialogue,” far from the robust stand it took in the Ivory Coast standoff between Alassane Ouattara and Laurent Gbagbo that resulted in a civil war. But, in Congo, while there continues to be high levels of violence, especially in the east, it does not seem to be related directly to the election results, and the population appears to have moved on. Only the Congolese Diaspora has been vocal. Of course, the international and domestic reactions probably re-enforce each other: the international community is unlikely to move when there is little domestic reaction, and domestic reaction may be more muted because of the tepid international voice.

Future developments might ignite a stronger popular reaction. But, for now, how to account for the apparent passivity of the Congolese population in the aftermath of flawed elections? Part of the answer may be Kabila’s relatively skillful use of repression – enough to paralyze the opposition but not so much that it produced a backlash. More fundamentally, as Adam Nossiter pointed out in the New York Times, the deep and pervasive poverty of the Congolese population means that most people are more concerned about feeding their families than about political activity or flawed election results.

Of necessity, this is speculation. But the question is worth asking. Why are some populations quiescent following flawed or stolen elections (Nigeria in 2007 and Congo now) while in others there is violent protest and the prospect of civil war (Kenya in 2007 or Zimbabwe in 2008). In Nigeria and Congo, the population historically has been largely alienated from government – any government. (In 2011, this may have changed in some parts of Nigeria, but not others.) In Kenya and Zimbabwe, with greater institutional development, however, government historically has mattered more to people. Maybe that has something to do with the different reactions to flawed elections, along with ethnic rivalries and a host of other issues. lt is an endlessly repeated cliché that African countries are all different – and their response to seemingly similar political developments reflects their own specific history and circumstances.

Post a Comment 2 Comments

  • Posted by leSavant

    What other shoe are you talking about ??? If the Congolese people are so relatively passive, uneducated, affraid, starving, repressive, and so on, WHY ARE YOU CALLING THEIR COUNTRY A “‘DEMOCRATIC” REPUBLIC?? These people has not even held a truly democartic elections in 51 years ,as they say. So, why the rest of you, Intellectual people are still labelling this country as such (Democratic) as if real democracy truly exists there??. It is time that common sense alone strarts to make the rest of the world accept that Congo is never a Democratic Republic, and shouldn,t be called so. Congolese leaders, incompetents as they are or have been, dictated such a name and imposed it on their people, knowing they don,t deserve it. So, if you want to be respected expert on Congolese matters, your first step is, to DEMANDE A CHANGE OF THE NAME DRC.

  • Posted by John Nelson

    I think that it is true that people in the provinces are more interested in finding their next meal than in the election results. But remember that the DRC is really 3 countries split between national, provincial and rural interests, with the latter most to gain from proper democracy, while the former jockey for position as they await the legislative results. Apparent passivity masks strong feelings at all levels. John Nelson Africa Delivers http://www.africadelivers.co.uk

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