The Dynamics of Violence in Central Africa. Rene Lemarchand

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The Dynamics of Violence in Central Africa - Rene Lemarchand


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      OTHER BOOKS BY RENÉ LEMARCHAND

      Political Awakening in the Congo

      Rwanda and Burundi

      African Kingships in Perspective (editor)

      American Policy in Southern Africa: The Stakes and the Stance (editor)

      Political Clientelism, Patronage and Development ( coeditor with S. N. Eisenstadt)

      The Green and the Black: Qadhafi's Policies in Africa (editor)

      Burundi: Ethnic Conflict and Genocide

       The Dynamics ofViolence inCentral Africa

      RENÉ LEMARCHAND

       PENN

      University of Pennsylvania Press

      Philadelphia

      National and Ethnic Conflict in the 21st Century

      Copyright © 2009 University of Pennsylvania Press

      All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations used for purposes of review or scholarly citation, none of this book may be reproduced in any form by any means without written permission from the publisher.

      Published by

      University of Pennsylvania Press

      Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4112

      Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Lemarchand, René.

      The dynamics of violence in central Africa / René Lemarchand.

       p. cm. — (National and ethnic conflict in the twenty-first century)

       Includes bibliographical references and index.

       ISBN 978-0-8122-4120-4 (alk. paper)

      1. Africa, Central—Politics and government—1960– 2. Africa,

      Central—Economic conditions—1960– 3. Africa, Central—Ethnic

      relations—Political aspects. 4. Political violence—Great Lakes Region

      (Africa) 5. Geopolitics—Great Lakes Region (Africa) 6. Genocide—Great

      Lakes Region (Africa) I. Title.

      DT352.8.L46 2008

      967.03—dc22 2008018612

       In memory of Lando Ndasingwa, a man of rare integrity and a friend of many years, savagely murdered in Kigali on the first day of the Rwanda bloodbath, April 7, 1994, along with his Canadian wife and two children

      Contents

       Preface

       PART I. THE REGIONAL CONTEXT

       Chapter 1. The Geopolitics of the Great Lakes Region

       Chapter 2. The Road to Hell

       PART II. RWANDA AND BURUNDI: THE GENOCIDAL TWINS

       Comparative Perspectives

       Chapter 3. Ethnicity as Myth

       Chapter 4. Genocide in the Great Lakes: Which Genocide? Whose Genocide?

       Rwanda

       Chapter 5. The Rationality of Genocide

       Chapter 6. Hate Crimes

       Chapter 7. The Politics of Memory

       Chapter 8. Rwanda and the Holocaust Reconsidered

       Burundi

       Chapter 9. Burundi 1972: A Forgotten Genocide

       Chapter 10. Burundi at the Crossroads

       Chapter 11. Burundi's Endangered Transition

       PART III. THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO: FROM FAILED STATE TO FRAGILE TRANSITION

       Chapter 12. A Blocked Transition: Zaire in 1993

       Chapter 13. Ethnic Violence, Public Policies, and Social Capital in North Kivu

       Chapter 14. The DRC: From Failure to Potential Reconstruction

       Chapter 15. The Tunnel at the End of the Light

       Chapter 16. From Kabila to Kabila: What Else Is New?

       Notes

       Index

       Acknowledgments

      Preface

       The one duty we owe to history is to rewrite it.—Oscar Wilde

      The Great Lakes region matters. It matters because of its vast territorial expanse and the many borders it shares with neighboring states, and the ever-present danger of violence spilling across boundaries. It matters because the Congo's huge mineral wealth translates into a uniquely favorable potential for economic development. While claiming the largest deposits of copper, cobalt, diamonds and gold anywhere in the continent—it is not for nothing that the Belgians called it a “geological scandal”—more than 60 percent of its population lives below the poverty line. More importantly, it matters because of the appalling bloodshed it continues to experience. Public revulsion over the Rwanda genocide has all but overshadowed the far greater scale of the human losses suffered in eastern Congo. The death toll between 1998 and 2004 was estimated to be nearly 4 million.1 If one adds the killings in Rwanda and Burundi since 1994, one reaches the staggering figure of approximately 5.5 million. To this day as many as 38,000 die every month of war-related causes. In many parts of the country, rape has become the weapon of choice of militias. The unspeakable has become commonplace. This in itself is a sufficient reason to devote serious attention to an area that is all too often dismissed as a latter-day version of the Heart of Darkness, entirely beyond redemption.

      At the root of the misconceptions and prejudices that


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