Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07KINSHASA89
2007-01-25 14:09:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Kinshasa
Cable title:  

EX-MOBUTUISTS HELP KABILA COALITION TAKE MAJORITY

Tags:  PGOV PINR KDEM CG ELECTIONS 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO8224
PP RUEHBZ RUEHDU RUEHGI RUEHJO RUEHMR RUEHRN
DE RUEHKI #0089/01 0251409
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 251409Z JAN 07
FM AMEMBASSY KINSHASA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 5473
INFO RUEHXR/RWANDA COLLECTIVE
RUCNSAD/SOUTHERN AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHDC
RHMFISS/HQ USEUCOM VAIHINGEN GE
RUFOADA/JAC MOLESWORTH RAF MOLESWORTH UK
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 04 KINSHASA 000089 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS


E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PINR KDEM CG ELECTIONS
SUBJECT: EX-MOBUTUISTS HELP KABILA COALITION TAKE MAJORITY
OF SENATE SEATS IN BEMBA'S EQUATEUR

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 04 KINSHASA 000089

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS


E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PINR KDEM CG ELECTIONS
SUBJECT: EX-MOBUTUISTS HELP KABILA COALITION TAKE MAJORITY
OF SENATE SEATS IN BEMBA'S EQUATEUR


1. (U) The pro-Kabila Alliance for the Presidential Majority
(AMP) won a slight majority in the senatorial delegation from
Jean-Pierre Bemba's home province of Equateur. AMP-aligned
candidates, including three who ran as independents, took
eleven of 20 national Senate seats, with one apiece for the
PPRD, the RADESO party, Nzanga Mobutu's UDEMO, and Azarias
Ruberwa's RCD, plus four seats for Jose Endundo's Christian
Democrat Party (PDC). Bemba's Movement for the Liberation of
Congo (MLC) won six seats, while two others allied with
Bemba's Union for the Nation (UN) coalition also won. One
other independent candidate, whose affiliation is yet
unknown, was also elected.


2. (U) The number of AMP candidates elected to the Senate
from Equateur is on the surface something of a surprise,
given that the area voted overwhelmingly for Bemba in the
2006 presidential elections. Bemba's UN coalition holds the
majority of seats in the 100-member provincial assembly,
including 37 by the MLC alone. Endundo's PDC and the PPRD
together, however, control another 24 seats in the assembly,
mainly in the southeast and northwest corners of the
province.


3. (U) The AMP coalition, which formed an alliance with the
RCD on the provincial level, won as many seats as it did
because voting by provincial assembly deputies was conducted
based on Equateur's five regional sub-provinces, a level on
which the AMP-UDEMO-RCD coalition has slight majorities or
near-parity with Bemba's UN. (Note: Equateur Province is
eventually to be divided into five separate provinces
according to the DRC's decentralization plan. While Senators
will represent the entire province for the time being, they
will represent their smaller constituencies if and when
decentralization occurs. End note.)


4. (U) The list of Senators from Equateur reads as a "Who's
Who" from the Mobutu era. Among the prominent figures elected
are Mobutu's intelligence chief Edouard Mokolo wa Mpombo (an
independent aligned with Kabila),former Deputy Interior
Minister for Internal Security Pius Isoyongo Lofete Loyangu
(an independent also aligned with Kabila),Mobutu's chief of
staff Michel Bongongo Ikoli Ndombo (MLC),former Prime
Minister Leon Kengo wa Dondo (independent aligned with

Bemba),Bemba's father Jeanot Bemba Saolona (MLC),and former
Minister of Interior Leon Engulu Baangampongo (UNADEC, a
member of the AMP).


5. (SBU) Biographical information:

Pius Isoyongo Lofete Loyangu (independent, allied with
Kabila/AMP)

Isoyongo, 52, served as National Assembly deputy during the
Transitional Government and headed the chamber's foreign
relations committee. He was the leader of Mbusa Nyamwisi's
RCD-K/ML component in the Assembly. A career security agent
with the National Documentation Agency (AND) and National
Service for Intelligence and Protection (SNIP) during the
Mobutu regime, he later served as deputy Interior Minister
for Internal Security in the final Mobutu government from
April-May 1997. He has a degree in politics and
administration. Born November 23, 1954.

Michel Bongongo Ikoli Ndombo (MLC)

Bongongo, 56, was most recently a senior professor at the
school of social, political and administrative sciences at
the National Pedagogic Institute in Kinshasa. He was the
first vice president of Kinshasa's regional assembly from
1985-1989 and its president from 1989-1990. He concurrently
served as Mobutu's national security adviser from 1986-1990
and was lahis chief of staff in 1993. Bongongo was also
President and Director-General of the Commercial and
Integrated Development business group SOCODI, as well as
counselor to the Ministries of Higher Education and Foreign
Affairs. A born-again Christian, he holds a doctorate in
philosophy from Catholic University of Louvain. Born November
5, 1950.

Edouard Mokolo wa Mpombo (independent, allied with Kabila/AMP)

Mokolo, 62, has been described as "Mobutu's Foccart." A
former student activist, he was a central player during the
early Mobutu years as the founder and head of the
intelligence services. He later served as Foreign Minister

KINSHASA 00000089 002 OF 004


from 1985-1986 after postings as ambassador to Cote d'Ivoire
in 1976 and France in 1980. A native of the provincial
capital Mbandaka, he was named senator from the political
opposition during the Transitional Government, and chaired
the Senate's exterior relations committee. The father of pop
musician Kaysha, he holds a degree in politics and
administration from Lovanium University (now known as the
University of Kinshasa). Born May 31, 1944.

Henri Thomas Lokondo Yoka (UCL, allied with Kabila/AMP)

Lokondo, 51, is the president of the Congolese Union for
Liberty (UCL) and an adviser to President Kabila. Appointed
to the Transitional National Assembly by Kabila, he lost his
race for a National Assembly seat in the July 2006 elections.
A former security agent for Mobutu's AND, he was the
Mobutuist deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs in Kengo wa
Dondo's 1996-1997 Zairian crisis government. Born July 27,

1955.

Leon Kengo wa Dondo (independent, allied with Bemba/UN)

Kengo wa Dondo, 71, was the longest-serving Prime Minister
under Mobutu. Born Joseph-Leon Lubicz to a Polish father and
Tutsi mother, he was appointed Prime Minister from 1982-1986,
and moved to the post of Foreign Minister from 1986-1987.
Mobutu again appointed him Prime Minister in 1988, where he
served until the creation of the Sovereign National
Conference (CNS) in 1990. The transitional parliament after
the CNS selected him as Prime Minister in 1994. He remained
in the post until the Congo's civil war began in late 1996,
when he then headed a crisis cabinet focused on defeating the
rebellion of Laurent Kabila. In April 1997 he resigned his
position, one month before Kabila's army arrived in Kinshasa,
and went into exile in Europe. He returned to the DRC in

2005. Born May 22, 1935.

Leopold Ndolela Siki Konde (MLC)

Ndolela, 70, was a senator in the Transitional Government,
the president of the MLC's organization in Equateur, and a
member of the MLC's College of Founders. Rector of the
University of Lubumbashi from 1983-1985, he was later an
adviser to Mobutu who helped craft strategies to sideline the
reforms of the CNS. He is the president of the Mbiya Cultural
Association, an advocacy group that represents the Ngbandi,
Mobutu's ethnic group. Born January 15, 2007.

Pierre Nzege Alaziambina (PPRD)

Nzege, 59, was a Transitional Government senator from
Equateur from the PPRD. After receiving his degree in
philosophy in 1974, he held academic positions at the
Universities of Lumbumbashi and Kinshasa, and later with the
Institute of Higher Education in Mbandaka. He was named
Minister of Primary and Secondary Education in 1983, serving
until 1990. Born January 15, 1948.

Jose Masikini Adongba (UDEMO)

Masikini, 45, is one of the youngest senators from Equateur.
Elected from the northern district of Nord-Ubangi, he is a
relative unknown politically. Born July 21, 1961.

Jeanot Bemba Saolona (MLC)

Jeanot Bemba, 64, is the father of former vice president and
presidential candidate Jean-Pierre Bemba. A senator during
the Transitional Government, he is one of the richest men in
the DRC and was known as "Mobutu's banker." He is the head of
multiple enterprises through his Equateur-based holding
company SCIBE (Bemba Commercial and Industrial Company),
which deals in the import-export, air transport and precious
metals sectors. His company owns one of the DRC's largest
airlines, Hewa Bora. He was jailed by Laurent Kabila but was
later named Minister of Economy by him in 1999. His daughter
is married to UDEMO founder and Kabila ally Nzanga Mobutu,
son of Mobutu Sese Seko. Born September 3, 1942.

Samuel Mbombo Engongo (MLC)

Mbombo, 64, is a former senior executive of Congo's Central
Bank and the CEO of the river navigation parastatal RVF. He
holds a degree in economics from the Lovanium University and
first served as an adviser to the Ministry of Transport and

KINSHASA 00000089 003 OF 004


Communications in 1969. In 1980 he was named Minister of
Portfolio and later served as President of the mining
parastatal Gecamines. He became deputy director general of
the oil industry parastatal Zaire SEP in 1994. Born October
15, 1942.

Thomas Betyna Ngilase Gbeledolo (PDC)

Betyna, 58, is the PDC's vice president for doctrine and
ideology and served as a member of the Transitional National
Assembly. A member of the Mobutu-era parliament from
1977-1982, he holds degrees in literature and economics. He
first worked with and NGO in Bwamanda, Equateur before
entering politics. Born November 11, 1948.

Richard Pendje Demodetdo Yako (RADESO)

Pendje, 61, is a former representative to UNESCO and director
of the International Organizations department of the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs. He holds a history degree from the
University of Strasbourg and a Masters from the University of
Toulouse. He headed the Ministry of Mines and Energy in 1984.
Subsequent positions in the late 1980s were at the Ministries
of Culture and Arts, Public Health, and Environment. Born
October 24, 1945.

Hilaire Mayamba Monga Liwanda (independent, affiliation
unknown)

Mayamba, 65, ran as an independent candidate from the
north-central Equateur district of Mongala. Born January 21,

1942.

Polycarpe Mongulu T'Apangane (MLC)

Mongulu, 61, is a longtime member of the Congolese legal
system. He holds a law degree from Kinshasa's Lovanium
University. A former prosecutor in Bas-Congo province, he was
prosecutor-general to the Kinshasa Court of Appeals and later
prosecutor-general under Laurent Kabila. He is a member of
the administrative council of Simon Kimbangu University. Born
March 3, 1945.

Sebastien Adambu Lomalisa (PDC)

Adambu, 62, is a member of Endundo's PDC from the
north-central Equateur district of Mongala. Born July 12,

1944.

Leon Mondole Esso Libanza (RCD)

Mondole, 43, was a deputy in the Transitional National
Assembly. He is a member of the RCD's College of Founders.
Born March 8, 1963.

Jacques Djoli Eseng'ekeli (MLC)

Djoli, 48, was deputy and later chief of staff to
Transitional Minister of Foreign Affairs Raymond Ramazani. A
former major in the army, he holds law degrees from the
University of Kinshasa and the Sorbonne. He is also a
professor of constitutional law at the University of Kinshasa
and at the Protestant University of the Congo. Born October
26, 1958.

Toussaint Ekombe Mpetsi (PDC)

Ekombe, 49, is a former MLC deputy from the Transitional
National Assembly who switched parties in 2006 to join
Endundo's PDC. He served as a member of the Lutundula
Commission mission to Eastern and Western Kasais. Born
November 1, 1957.

Denis Engunda Litumba (PDC)

Engunda, 52, was defeated in his race for a National Assembly
seat in the Befale district of central Equateur. Born
November 10, 1954.

Leon Engulu Baangampongo (UNADEC)

Engulu, 72, is the president of the National Union of
Christian Democrats (UNADEC) and served as a senator for the
MLC during the Transitional Government. A member of the 1960
Political Roundtable in Brussels that led to Congolese

KINSHASA 00000089 004 OF 004


independence, he is nicknamed the "Baron of Equateur." From
1962-1968 he served as governor of Equateur, Kivu, and
Katanga, and Cuvette Central. Under Mobutu he held several
positions, including Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of
Public Works, and Minister of Interior. A member of Mobutu's
Popular Movement of the Revolution (MPR) political bureau, he
served on MPR's central committee from 1980-1990. Born April
1, 1934.
MEECE