People's Revolution Party (Congo)
The People's Revolution Party (French: Parti de la révolution du peuple) (PRP) was a clandestine political party that existed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and in Zaire. The PDP was a Marxist political movement born in the convulsions of the Congolese crisis, being founded in 1967 in Fizi by Laurent-Désiré Kabila, who decades later would overthrow Mobutu and take control of the country.
People's Revolution Party Parti de la Révolution du Peuple | |
---|---|
Leader | Laurent-Désiré Kabila |
Founded | 24 December 1967 |
Dissolved | 1996 |
Split from | MNC-L |
Preceded by | Kabila-Massengo faction of the Simba Rebels |
Merged into | AFDL |
Headquarters | Hewa Bora |
Ideology | Communism Marxism–Leninism–Maoism Anti-colonialism Anti-Mobutism Congolese nationalism |
Political position | Far-left |
History
Former militant of Patrice Lumumba's Congolese National Movement and supporter of Pierre Mulele's short-lived People's Republic of the Congo, Laurent-Désiré Kabila, withdrew with his men in 1965 to the mountains of the Fizi region, east of the Democratic Republic Republic of Congo. Gaining limited control of the mountain towns, they organized a people's commune, Hewa Bora, on the Chinese model. On December 24, 1967,[1] they founded the People's Revolution Party (PRP) in an attempt to establish a mass party that would overthrow Mobutu and spread the revolution throughout the country, establishing a socialist Congo. The PRP was Maoist in inspiration and received support from China and Julius Nyerere's Tanzania.
Inspired by the 1979 overthrow of Idi Amin and by the Uganda Bush War, Kabila and his supporters were convinced that conditions were brewing for a Protracted People's War in Zaire. The PRP started a series of guerrilla uprisings and insurrections known as the Moba Wars. However, after several years of armed struggle, the FAZ will succeed in crushing the Maoist insurgents, who will be reduced to a weakened network scattered throughout East Africa and Western Europe. After the Rwandan Genocide and the Zairian crisis, Kabila, who had abandoned Maoism, will reappear on the political scene as one of the main leaders against Mobutism. At the invitation of the new regimes in Uganda (Yoweri Museveni) and Rwanda (Paul Kagame), Laurent-Désiré Kabila became in 1996 the spokesman for the Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of the Congo (AFDL), a heterogeneous coalition of forces hostile to Mobutu, including the CNRD, the ADP and the MRLZ.[2] With the founding of the AFDL, the PRP formally disappeared.
References
- "Fondation du Parti révolutionnaire du peuple au Congo".
- De Villers, Gauthier. "Identifications et mobilisations politiques au Congo-Kinshasa". Politique africaine. 72: 85–86.