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Zaire
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Mobutu Sese Seko ,
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president of the Central African country of Zaire for the last 30 years, is
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considered the continent's most brutal and corrupt living dictator. Since
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October, rebels have battled his army. Last week they seized Kisangani ,
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Zaire's third-largest city, and may soon topple him. Some Africa watchers
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predict that chaos could spread to Zaire's nine neighbors. What's it all
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about?
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part of Zaire's current crisis to the boundaries it inherited from its
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Belgian colonizers. The country--the size of Western Europe minus
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Scandinavia--envelops almost 250 tribes . They frequently conflict.
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Bantus, the country's largest tribe, constitute the majority west of the rain
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forest that divides Zaire. East of the rain forest is a hodgepodge.
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Zaire used to be called the Belgian Congo . At
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independence in 1960, a Soviet-backed socialist party took power. In 1965, a
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CIA-backed military coup brought down this government and installed army chief
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Mobutu as president. Using violence, anti-colonial rhetoric, and a cult of
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personality, Mobutu consolidated his power and suppressed tribal tensions. As
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part of a program called "Mobutu-ism," he changed the country's name. It all
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worked fairly well until recently.
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The most
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unsettling development has been the civil war in Rwanda , Zaire's eastern
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neighbor. The war is between the country's two main tribes--the Hutus
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and the Tutsis . In 1994, when Rwanda's Tutsi minority seized power, 1.5
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million Hutu refugees fled across the border to Zaire. These refugees included
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members of the Hutu militias that had led the murder of 1 million Rwandan
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Tutsis. With the sanction of local Zairian officials, these militias used camps
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in Zaire as bases for raids into Rwanda. To avenge these attacks, Paul Kagame,
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vice president and defense minister of Rwanda, arranged for the combat training
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of 2,000 Banyamulenge, Tutsis indigenous to Eastern Zaire. In October, the
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Banyamulenge commandos attacked Mobutu's army and the Hutu militias operating
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out of Zaire. They routed both forces, causing them to flee into the country's
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interior rain forest.
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Mobutu's political opponents have joined
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with the victorious Tutsi commandos. In November, they launched a joint
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offensive and so far have captured a thousand-mile swath of territory in the
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East. The opposition army mainly consists of separatists from Shaba and Kasai
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provinces in East Zaire and supporters of the original post-colonial
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government, who have battled Mobutu's army sporadically since the dictator's
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ascent. The most powerful rebel leader is Laurent Kabila, head of the
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Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo-Zaire. Though Kabila,
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a member of the pre-1965 government, has renounced his Marxist past, many in
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the West worry about his socialist tendencies.
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While
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militarily successful, Kabila's alliance with the Tutsis is a political
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handicap for him, because many Bantus have their own deep-seated hatred toward
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Tutsis. Another obstacle to Kabila's revolt is the lack of national
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infrastructure . Crossing the roadless rain forest, from recently captured
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Kisangani to Kinshasa, the capital, will be arduous.
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Zaire's economic collapse may make all these tribal
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differences irrelevant. Groups normally hostile to Tutsis, including Bantu
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student protesters in Kinshasa, have turned against Mobutu. Despite Zaire's
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natural resources , including some of the world's richest diamond and
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copper mines, the country has become one of the poorest in Africa. In 1994, its
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gross national product was less than a third of what it had been in 1958.
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Zairian industry runs at only 10 percent of capacity. American aid to Zaire
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dried up after the end of the Cold War diminished Zaire's strategic importance.
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And Mobutu's corruption has siphoned off resources. The president is said to
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have plundered $6 billion straight from the government treasury, making him one
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of the richest men in the world. He pays his civil service virtually no salary,
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requiring them to earn their income through bribes.
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In
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October, the 66-year-old Mobutu went to Switzerland to receive treatment for
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prostate cancer. Except for short visits to Zaire in December and February, he
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has been staying at his villas on the French Riviera and in Monaco. His absence
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has hastened the country's disintegration. Many Zairians consider Mobutu to be
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the stern-but-loving "national father ." Other more superstitious
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Zairians endow him with a supernatural aura, something he has cultivated
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through his identification with the leopard, which signifies omnipotence in
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Bantu iconography. (Mobutu made "Leopard" his nickname and always wears a
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leopard-skin hat .) In Mobutu's absence, various politicians have
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jockeyed for power, creating serious harm to the war effort. This week, the
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parliament voted to oust the prime minister. The army is in shambles, and large
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sections of the country have been running themselves, without oversight from
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the central government.
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Increasingly desperate, Mobutu uses Serbian
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mercenaries to fight the rebels. In addition, the army relies on assistance
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from Jonas Savimbi's UNITA army (anti-communist rebels from neighboring Angola,
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formerly backed by the CIA). Sudan and Uganda, also neighbors, have sent troops
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to assist the rebels. Their intentions are unclear: Do they hope to grab land
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from Zaire? Are they seeking to avenge Mobutu's long support of rebellions in
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their countries? Some experts predict that their involvement in the war could
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escalate the conflict, drawing these countries into battle with one
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another.
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The Clinton administration
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has not officially taken a position on the civil war. However, it has tacitly
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encouraged the rebels, in the belief that Mobutu's patronage of guerrilla
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forces in the region is destabilizing. American opposition to Mobutu has
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been a source of tension with France, which supports the Hutus and resents
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Kabila's alliance with the Banyamulenge.
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