Front Démocratique Congolais (DRC)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Front Démocratique Congolais
AbbreviationFDC
LeaderJoseph Kasa-Vubu
Victor Nendaka Bika
SpokespersonCléophas Kamitatu[1]
FounderVictor Nendaka Bika
Founded1965
Banned1966
Merger ofProvinces Martyres
other opposition groups
Split fromConvention Nationale Congolaise
IdeologyBig-tent
Anti-Moïse Tshombe
Chamber (4 October 1965)[2]
72 / 166
Senate (4 October 1965)[2]
59 / 132

The Front Démocratique Congolais (lit.'Congolese Democratic Front') or FDC was a coalition formed in 1965 by Convention Nationale Congolaise dissidents and other opponents of Prime Minister Moïse Tshombe. The group was founded by Victor Nendaka Bika and held control of the Senate and the Prime Minister post until the Second Mobutu coup d'état. It supported President Joseph Kasa-Vubu.

Under President Mobutu, while political activities by parties were suspended, the FDC held positions in Léonard Mulamba's cabinet before Mobutu dissolved all parties.

Moïse Tshombe in 1963

In 1964, a "marriage of convenience" was formed between President Joseph Kasa-Vubu and former Katangan secessionist leader Moïse Tshombe when the latter was appointed Prime Minister. This move was motivated by several factors, including the threat that Tshombe might deploy his Angola-based forces against the central government and his demonstrated ability to organize effective mercenary units needed to suppress the ongoing Simba rebellion. Kasa-Vubu intended the appointment to be a temporary expedient.[3]

By the spring of 1965, however, this fragile alliance began to unravel as Tshombe sought to consolidate his power by organizing a well-financed nationwide political party (more accurately an electoral alliance of 49 parties/lists), the Convention Nationale Congolaise (CONACO), which threatened Kasa-Vubu as the approved Luluabourg Constitution called for parliamentary elections and, later, a presidential election.[3] This "coalition of circumstance", led by a "politician of indisputable charm and skill" and benefiting from access to the national treasury, was able to secure 122 seats in the 1965 Democratic Republic of the Congo general election.[4] Many politicians joined the coalition purely as a means to get elected.[5]

Kasa-Vubu in 1960
Nendaka in 1961 (far right)

While Kasa-Vubu's party, the AKABO, only secured 10 seats, he still had the advantage of the prerogatives of being president, and the fact that the conditions that had prompted him to appoint Tshombe had largely been resolved: the Simbas had effectively been crushed, the Katangan troops had successfully been integrated into the arny under General Joseph Mobutu's leadership, and the mercenaries had been effectively brought into the picture.[6]

The leaders, privately, clashed as Kasavubu argued that Tshombe's provisional government mandate would end as soon as the results of the elections were known, while Tshombe preferred to delay his government's resignation until after the presidential election, which he intended to contest. The new constitution had increased the powers of the presidency while diminishing those of the prime minister, making the office far more attractive to Tshombe.[7][8]

History

References

Works cited

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI