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The
fall of the house of Mobutu
Peter
Rosenblum
May 05, 1997
http://www.salon.com/may97/zaire970505.html
They endured
31 years of a stupid, vicious dictatorship while cooking up the
best music and tastiest caterpillars on the continent. Now, the
people of Zaire are about to get their own names back.
There is one
sure thing about the war that is currently raging in the middle
of Africa: We are all going to need new world maps pretty soon,
because there isn't going to be a country called Zaire for long.
Twenty-five years ago, a dictator named Mobutu Sese Seko made up
the name, made up his own name and made everyone make up new names.
Now people want their old names back.
It makes you
wonder whether map makers are involved in fomenting revolution.
It took 30 years for the people of Zaire to rise up. They lived
through the most venal dictatorship. They invented a word to describe
Mobutu's government: "kleptocracy," a government of thieves.
You could feel sorry for the Zairians, blame them or blame the others
who supported the dictatorship. But you also had to admire their
skill in coping, their legendary débrouillardaise -- literally,
their ability to make it through the fog. Not only did they survive
31 years of dictatorship, they produced the continent's finest music,
the tastiest caterpillars and a crop of youth absurdly committed
to building a new, rational society.
This is what
I thought about the day journalists started calling to ask me about
President Mobutu and the country still known as Zaire. After years
of traveling back and forth to the country, I have become an "expert"
on human rights and politics in Zaire, one of the cursed talking
heads on TV who deprives you of local sports results in order to
give you news of faraway disaster. "Try the caterpillars,"
I wanted to tell the journalists, "they are delicious."
Not that they are the best example of Zairian genius, but to get
to the caterpillars you have to get to the Zairians first. The press
had other things in mind. NBC wanted to know about Mobutu's sex
habits, an interesting subject I didn't know enough about. But I
responded earnestly to their questions: I kept telling the tale
of horrors that is entirely true. The news even ran a segment where
I used the word "seduce" (although in reference to politicians,
not women). But none of the joy of Zaire was there.
"Eat the
caterpillars," he kept saying, "they're full of protein."
As if I, among all the stick-thin people in the room, was in particular
need of sustenance. I was at the home of a dissident physician in
Zaire's capital, Kinshasa. Servicing the clandestine political opposition
was not particularly lucrative. His house, like almost all the others
I visited, was just a shell of concrete with patches of paint left
over from colonial days. The food on the table was certainly more
than anyone in the family had seen in a month. And no one else touched
it. They were waiting for me. I tasted the caterpillars. They were
greasy, crunchy and bitter.
That was in
1989, when I first went to Zaire to document human rights abuses.
My job was to investigate rumors of political detention, torture
and disappearances. The group I worked with hoped that if my reports
were vivid -- and grisly -- enough, we could pressure the Zairian
government and persuade its allies to stop sending Mobutu money.
I was well-read,
but naive, with a post-Vietnam, post-Watergate sense of outrage
about the United States' role in the developing world. Though I'd
never been to Africa before, I thought I knew what to expect. The
misery, violence and repression came as no surprise, but I wasn't
prepared for the hidden gems, the decency and intelligence cloaked
in misery. There was a group of men around the table, some in worn
suits, others in shirtsleeves. All of them were what we would call
shabby. Who would know that here was the country's first great mathematician
and former director of the national airlines. And there was the
mysterious "Muntuntu" ("grasshopper"), whose
regular communications kept a dedicated network up to date on the
horrors in the country.
Zaire, a country
larger than the United States east of the Mississippi, is a land
of fabled mineral wealth. Belgium thrived off its riches for decades
and parted with it only under duress. The Belgians left in 1960
and were replaced by the United States. The CIA made Zaire its home,
helped dispose of populist leader Patrice Lubumba and replaced him
with Mobutu -- who in those days was known as Joseph Desiré.
A lot of world-class spies and traffickers made their way to Zaire.
One was Bill Close, actress Glenn Close's father, who became Mobutu's
personal physician and gatekeeper. It wasn't clear whether he reported
to the CIA or the CIA reported to him.
President Mobutu
remained one of America's best friends in Africa, though he quickly
proved himself a tyrant -- a laughable one in some ways, strutting
about in his leopard-skin hat, lavishly dispensing gifts from the
central bank. Some of his laws were right out of a Woody Allen film:
No ties. No first names. No "Mr." or "Mrs."
Everybody would henceforth be known as "citizen." That
was when the Congo became Zaire and the president became Citizen
Mobutu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbendu wa za Banga, which officially means
"the all-powerful warrior who, because of his endurance and
inflexible will to win, will go from conquest to conquest."
(Strangely, however, the word "kuku" means "chicken,"
which no one can explain.) The laws themselves were degrading --
people were forced to wear Mobutu's face on their bodies every Monday
or they'd lose their jobs -- and covered an even more pernicious
system of repression.
By 1989, congressional
Democrats were using human rights as a battle cry to stop aid to
Zaire. Mobutu hired a new lobbyist, a flamboyant and mustachioed
specialist in pariah nations named Ed Van Kloberg III*. "Unscrupulous"
is the word that most people use to describe him. True, but he had
more fun than his urbane-seeming peers. (Once, when we got to know
each other, he gave me a tour of all the things he'd picked off
the shelves of his various clients -- gold cups, crystal glasses
...) With his assistance, Mobutu decided to take on the human rights
problems in the simplest possible way: He presented himself before
the U.S. Congress and lied. "We have nothing to hide,"
he said. "You can come look for yourself."
And so we did.
As I think back
to that time, I am struck by how naive we were, my colleague, Makau
Mutua -- a deeply radical Kenyan who had escaped repression in his
own country -- and I. We spent our days and nights smoking, drinking,
screaming at each other about the impact of Western imperialism.
(He insisted having an au pair was like keeping a slave. I said
his obsession with professional sports was a capitalist cop-out.)
We would spend the morning wandering into homes that had never seen
a white man or a black man with a tie, and play up to ministers
and television cameras in the afternoon. (This was an official visit,
after all.) In the evening, we would return to white man's land
-- the fashionable restaurants in the center of town where suddenly
Makau was an oddity: a black man on equal terms. The black service
staff didn't know how to treat him. And then, sometime in the middle
of the night, there was always a knock on the door from someone
who had more information, more abuses to report.
Many stories
from Zaire at that time begin and end with a description of arriving
in the country. There is nothing simple like passport control, luggage
belts or a baggage claim at the airport. Instead, we arrived to
face a gauntlet of beggars, thieves and security men reaching into
our pockets and grabbing our bags the moment we set foot on the
tarmac. Thieves even fought with each over who would get the first
bite. We had to give up our passports -- and "buy" them
back. That much was unavoidable. But the rest was all a matter of
strategic planning and negotiation: If we showed weakness, we'd
be eaten alive.
Later, I learned
how to make my way through the pack. I would choose one person and
throw my fate into his hands, forcing him to swear lifelong loyalty.
It often worked. Then, one time, just as I was congratulating myself
on conserving most of the $6,000 in cash that I was carrying --
travelers checks and credit cards were worthless -- I was nabbed
by a man in a suit, a very bad sign. He took me to a shack at the
end of the parking lot, separating me from my protector. It cost
$150. But the worst came afterwards, when, looking defeated, I attracted
a whole new set of vultures. At that point my protector returned
and convinced everyone that I had been sufficiently "devoured,"
a Zairian term of art.
Zairians outside
the country had told us that we would fail in our mission. Nobody
would speak to us, they said. And it was mostly true. The weight
of repression was palpable in the city of Kinshasa. Even the most
inoffensive things were said only in hushed voices. One day a cab
driver complimented a minister. We had been cultivating this particular
old man for days, paying him by the hour, feeding him and plying
him with beer. I was so pleased to get an opinion out of him. Then,
suddenly, in a panic, he said, "Don't tell anyone a cab driver"
-- we didn't even know his name -- "told you that, we could
get in trouble." Even a compliment to the wrong person could
be perceived as an insult to the only one who really mattered.
But almost by
chance, we stumbled upon the mother lode of resistance. We had met
with a million useless Zairian refugees abroad, people who claimed
to command armed troops and opposition parties around the country.
Then we heard about a man who had just been flown in from Kinshasa.
At a hospital outside Brussels, we met him as he recovered from
surgery. He had a big hole under his ribs from where they had just
removed large portions of his stomach and intestines because of
injuries from soldiers kicking him at a demonstration. He gave us
his own story and an address in Kinshasa.
When we got
to the city, we jumped in a cab and headed down dirt roads that
had not seen cars for a long time. We found the address and met
a woman who greeted us carefully. We wrote the name of our hotel
and left. By the next day, we were at the center of an elaborate
web of clandestine political meetings around the city of Kinshasa.
It was a heady
time. We were suddenly privy to a secret world of people who had
lost everything in their efforts to redeem the state and claim their
rights. Our work centered around three activists, the "grasshopper,"
the "professor" and especially the "old soldier"
-- a nearly fleshless man who, at predetermined moments, appeared
from nowhere and always refused to accept either food or travel
money. His writing was nearly incomprehensible, but he spoke with
a stentorian French from another century.
Then one day
our little window closed. The old soldier missed a rendezvous. It
could have been a mistake, but as life imitates art, we knew something
terrible had happened. No one came to inform us right away. But
we started receiving dire reports in obscure notes. Others started
to disappear. We were terrified. All the more so because we had
a pretty good idea, by then, of what was happening to those who
disappeared. We knew about beatings with "cordelettes"
-- paratrooper's ropes with four-inch metal clasps -- and about
people kept in dark rooms without food. It usually took at least
a week before a missing friend turned up, sometimes dead, sometimes
alive, in prison.
We returned
to the States with no news of our friends and began furiously fighting
the Van Kloberg propaganda machine. Every step was countered. In
response to our protests, the Zairians accused us of soliciting
bribes, meeting with anarchists and playing James Bond. Mobutu literally
kidnapped one of our Zairian contacts, the professor, and brought
him to the United States. We were denounced. Then, at the last minute,
a congressman close to Mobutu called to say the whole thing was
a mistake.
Our friends
were released and we rushed back to Zaire. We met with them -- long
enough to meet the old soldier's baby, who had been baptized Peter
Makau while the father was still in prison. But before we had a
chance to celebrate, the Zairian authorities decided they had had
enough of us. In broad daylight, in front of the major business
hotel, six well-fed men knocked us to the ground and fought for
our briefcases. Bruised and slightly torn, we were whisked off to
the office of the security police and then, just as quickly, whisked
back to the hotel without any explanation. Inquiries were made by
the U.S. Embassy, and we were instructed to leave the country as
quickly as possible. The Zairian government claimed the attack was
our own fault. We weren't supposed to be in the country, anyhow.
Ironically,
getting beaten up and thrown out of the country turned out to be
the best thing we ever did. The New York Times picked up the story
and, Van Kloberg told me years later, it brought his successful
campaign for Mobutu to an end.
One night, several
years ago, I dreamed of Goma. Lush green and rolling hills, interrupted
by a volcano so perfect it seemed a real-life imitation of an artist's
rendering. Later the refugees would arrive and the volcano would
glow in the night as if to signal the gods' wrath and impending
doom. But at the time of my dream it was a forgotten city, cut off
from everywhere, even the rest of Zaire.
I dreamed of
a volleyball game. Barbara Bush was there. (In fact, she had just
been quoted in the paper, chiding President Mobutu for not eating
his vegetables at a state dinner. "I'm positively glued to
him," she said.) At one moment the ball escaped and I ran after
it. Suddenly, in that way that narratives shift in a dream, I was
possessed by the need to make a phone call. I stepped into a phone
booth and called a woman who now publishes interactive art in a
Web magazine. She wasn't home. I woke up.
All I could
think of, all morning, was my dream. Something was wrong. Eventually,
I realized what it was. The telephone. There are no phone booths
in Goma. There are no phone booths anywhere in Zaire. In fact, until
recently, there were hardly any phones, and no access to them. It's
no surprise that everyone in Zaire relies on rumor and no one outside
the country has any idea what is going on.
When the end
of the regime comes -- and with rebel leader Laurent Kabila meeting
with Mobutu as his troops close in on Kinshasa, it seems to be imminent
-- someone should build a little shrine to the cellular phone. What
first looked like a toy for the rich became the means of breaking
the spell of government control over people and information. To
reach Zaire, we had spent hours -- sometimes all night -- with telephones
lined up in a room, calling mysterious numbers with a dozen digits,
pleading with operators around the world to find a way through.
Sometimes, magically, a phone would ring and a minister would pick
up. In moments the phone would die again.
Then, the cellular
telephone arrived. At first, it only benefited the rich. Having
a phone directory gave us a way to reach the most powerful in the
country. Slowly, sporadically, others gained access. At the same
time, the Cold War was ending and pressure was building for reform.
Suddenly, there were people openly talking about human rights and
democracy. Some of our old friends went into the open political
opposition; others, especially younger Zairians, helped to create
human rights groups. We knew them all and tried in various ways
to nurture them.
But the new
human rights activists were like my brother's eighth-grade band.
They gave themselves exotic and aspirational names, picked up instruments
and began to move around the room, picking, strumming and drumming
nearly at random. I got phone calls in the middle of the night,
costing someone dozens of dollars a minute. "Hi, it's me."
"Yes," I said, "What news?" "Nothing."
"Nothing?" "Well, some people were arrested."
"Who?" "It's not clear." I went back to bed
touched by confusion from the other end of the world.
And then, suddenly,
they mastered their instruments.
My favorite
thing about Zaire -- aside from discovering the truly tasty caterpillars,
the palm tree "mpose," as they call them -- was overcoming
the great taboo: the tribe. There are many tribes in Zaire. Also
in New York.
One of the many
strange things about Zaire are the Jews. There had once been hundreds
of Jews, living in Zaire, mostly Sephardic Jews from the island
of Rhodes. The few who are still there today speak Ladino, a Spanish
"Yiddish" carried away from Spain when the Jews were expelled
in 1492.
One day my car
broke down in Lubumbashi. I stepped out with my camera, excused
myself and ran down the block to the old boarded-up synagogue near
the center of town. When I returned to the car, the sullen Zairian
colleague I traveled with wore a wide grin of discovery. A little
embarrassed -- because of the way he asked the question -- I confirmed
I'm Jewish. He was transformed. It was as if he had figured me out.
But it was even more than that. Suddenly, I too was tribal and he
could relax. He immediately began spouting stories about himself
and his people.
There are two
approaches to tribes: You can either blame them for everything or
make believe they aren't there. Political correctness dictates the
latter. A hundred thousand Hutus killed up to a million Tutsis,
but today in Rwanda the most indiscreet thing you can do is ask
someone his "tribe."
Europeans were
so fixed on the idea of tribes they invented them left and right.
Agreeable Africans, comfortable with a fluid identity, often complied
and eventually created the imagined grouping. A few years ago, in
the same great tradition, the New York Times invented tribes to
describe the violence that was shaking the Zairian region of Shaba.
Actually, the violence there was regional, set members of the same
tribe against each other and had nothing at all to do with tribes.
In Zaire, one's
tribe is just one piece of a rich identity that may lead to love
or hatred. One night at a party, I suddenly realized that I was
surrounded by macho Lubas -- one of the most impressive ethnic groups
in the country. I was strategically placed next to the beautiful
daughter of a high dignitary of the tribe, and was struggling to
be very politically correct when suddenly she whispered to me, "I
would never marry a Luba; they treat women like dirt."
The sad thing
about Mobutu's regime is that it has whittled away at the links
that bound people outside the tribe: Authoritarian states undermine
the power of rationality itself. People turn first to the people
of their region, then their tribe, then their village and are eventually
left with only the members of their family to rely on. And quite
consciously throughout the regime, the tribe and the region were
instrumentalized and set against each other. It is all part of the
divide-and-rule strategies first used by the colonizers. Even now,
invisible to most observers, Mobutu is engaged in the most delicate
act of regional and tribal baiting, seeking to create division between
the rebels and the non-violent opposition. You almost have to applaud
him for his deathbed skill.
I kept returning
to Zaire. Foolhardy, perhaps, but I suspect not. Others were thrown
out, now and then, but I was left alone. Maybe they thought I was
protected; maybe I was. My work had shifted away from the torture
reports, toward efforts to bring Zairian opposition members help
-- in the form of money and expertise -- from outside the country.
We didn't bring about the current unrest, but we helped create groups
of people who can and will take the reins when democracy comes to
Zaire.
I ate grasshoppers
with Muntuntu on one of the several occasions he was released from
prison. I saw a new generation of normal people emerge from a country
that was entirely abnormal. Military pillaging wiped out most of
the remaining modern economy. But somehow, people kept going, defying
all predictions of violence and starvation.
A number of
years ago, a Zairian sociologist said that if you put all the data
that existed about Zaire into a computer, it would declare the country
not to exist. Officially, nothing works. No one is paid to do his
job. No building has ever been repaired and no schoolhouse built.
And yet, mysteriously, life goes on: The teachers teach, the judges
judge, the students study, the electricity functions. What makes
it work is "corruption," as we would call it with our
limited vocabularies. Once a Zairian friend wanted to give me a
quick demonstration of how natural and unquestioned it had become.
We were in his car near a gridlocked intersection. He summoned the
policeman and, without a word, handed him a wad of bills. The policeman
saluted and returned to his post, without a word in return. He then
stopped traffic for us to proceed through the intersection.
Sometimes, I
think my friends are like frogs in a bucket of water. A frog jumps
out of a hot bucket of water. But if you heat the water slowly,
it boils to death. At one moment, the good guys seemed to be winning
the battle. We even went to have lunch in the officers' mess, the
mouth of the beast, where we ate from plates emblazoned with the
seal of the president. Then, suddenly another crackdown came. The
soldiers turned on the people. Nuns were raped; church property
was targeted. The frog was definitely boiling.
It was so hard
to keep track of the major abuse that it was pointless to mention
the minor. A friend was late to a meeting, robbed and beaten by
police. An inconvenience. My taxi was commandeered by thugs claiming
to be security. I jumped at an intersection and ran. A bother. And
then, as one, the people decided to breathe. The city came alive.
The bars were hopping. There was nothing to do but dance all night.
I was back in
Zaire over Christmas, seeing old friends and learning about the
new threat -- or new salvation -- coming from the east. Rebels,
shrouded in their own mystery, are sweeping away the last remnants
of Mobutu's state. My friends were ambivalent, happy to see the
departures but suspicious of what new military might would mean.
The daily reports of slaughter confirm their worst fears about a
new dictator in the making.
As I sat in
a bar watching the money-changers adjust the exchange rate every
half hour to account for hyperinflation, I admired again the Zairian
capacity for resistance, the ability to survive, to make it through
the fog. There is a new age coming in Zaire, together with a new
name. Mobutu will be out of power by the end of the month. A new
leader will arrive. Zaire may again become the land of international
intrigue as the West recalls the mineral wealth left untapped.
When I was back
there, I learned a new recipe for caterpillars. It's particularly
disgusting to describe, but if properly prepared, it might transform
an entire nation.
*Addendum (Ten
years on): Van Kloberg eventually died by leaping to his death from
a 'castle in Rome'. I think he had a terminal illness and wanted
something more dramatic for his end. The age of international intrigue
has definitely returned to the Congo.
Peter Rosenblum
is a white, Jewish boy who runs the Human Rights program at Harvarad
Law School.
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