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On October 16, the troops of the former president of Congo Brazzaville, M. Sassou
Nguesso, took control of the capital Brazzaville, thus ousting the current president
Pascal Lissouba, after a five month long civil war.
It would be very difficult to understand the reasons for this conflict without taking
into account the background struggle for influence between French and US imperialism in
Africa, and the interests of the different oil companies in the rich oil fields in Congo
Brazzaville's Atlantic coast.
The French company Elf controls 3/4 of the Congolese oil production and therefore
represents one of the main sources of income of this African country. The links between
the French multinational and the countries government are many, visible and invisible.
Since Sassou Nguesso became president of the "People's Republic" of Congo, the
relations between the government and the company could not have been better.
But when Pascal Lissouba was elected president in 1992 (after the former Stalinist
Congolese Labour Party adopted "free market" economy and a multi party system),
he opened relations with the US based Occidental Petroleum (Oxy), which in exchange agreed
to pay for the wage arrears of public employees.
Thus, it is not difficult to see that when last June the civil war started Elf sided
although not openly with Sassou Nguesso. According to "sources in the French secret
services" Nguessou's militias "were able to get supplies from Europe through the
financing circuits of the oil companies" (Le Monde, 17/10/97).
Angola also sided with Nguessou for a double reason. First of all Elf is also the main
company exploiting the oil resources of Angola, but most important of all Angola's
intervention in Congo allowed it to smash a great deal of the remaining UNITA forces still
operating from this country againts the Angolan regime. And at the same time it dealt a
serious blow to the Cabinda nationalist guerrillas also operating from Congo-Brazzaville.
Angola's troops were crucial to ensure Nguessou's victory in the Western province around
Pointe-Noire (the main oil producing area) and in the capital Brazzaville itself.
Kabila's new Democratic Republic of Congo (former Zaire) sided in this war with Pascal
Lissouba. This could seem surprising as this put him in opposition to Angola, while this
country supported his campaign to overthrow Mobutu in the former Zaire. This can only be
understood in the context of the French-US rivalry in Africa. Mobutu's overthrow was a
blow againts French interests in the area, while Kabila was supported by those countries
in the US sphere of influence (mainly Uganda and Rwuanda). Kabila therefore chose to
oppose France's interests in this conflict.
This conflict therefore does not benefit in any way the masses of these countries who
see how different multinational companies and imperialist powers play with their future as
if pawns in an international chess match. Five months and 4,000 people dead after, maybe
the only good thing to come out of the conflict is the smashing of the mercenary forces of
the UNITA thugs.
All this situation only reinforces the idea of the need for an independent movement of
the working class and the masses in the area against all foreign imperialist powers and to
take control of these countries' natural ressources. Such a movement would spread rapidly
througout the whole of Africa and beyond, and can only be organised on the basis of
socialist ideas. |