Mnangagwa demands US$1bn war compensation from DRC 

Mnangagwa demands US$1bn war compensation from DRC 

Source: Mnangagwa demands US$1bn war compensation from DRC – The Zimbabwe Independent March 9, 2018

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa last week took his election campaign begging bowl to Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) President Joseph Kabila, where the two leaders also discussed the political and security situation in their countries and Zimbabwe’s long-standing demand for US$1 billion compensation for participating in the DRC war.

By Bernard Mpofu

Although diplomatic relations between the two countries have continued to be cordial, Harare and Kinshasa have a long-standing disagreement over compensating the Zimbabwean government for its active role in the 1990s war, dubbed “Africa’s first world war”. Zimbabwe’s decisive intervention saved Kinshasa from a military takeover by rebels backed by neighbouring Rwanda and Burundi.

Zimbabwe and Angola suffered heavy casualties during the war. The country lost military arsenal running into billions of dollars.

Mnangagwa, who has been flying to regional countries following his swearing in last November, appraised Kabila on the political and security situation in the country in the aftermath of the military intervention in November last year, which ended former president Robert Mugabe’s 37-year grip on power.

The two, government sources added, also discussed the unstable political situation in the Great Lakes region following Kabila’s intransigence over elections.

They also discussed Kabila’s security and the role being played by Zimbabwean soldiers who have been part of the DRC leader’s security team.

“Mnangagwa told his DRC counterpart that he needs money to run his election campaign. He asked for Kabila’s assistance in that regard. The resource-rich DRC played a big role during the last elections and has always been one of the go-to countries during elections,” a source said.

“The leaders also discussed issues relating to the compensation of nearly US$1 billion for the equipment lost during the 1990s war.”

Zimbabwe is expected to go for elections in July.

Harare has since 2000 been demanding about US$1 billion from the DRC for military and consumables expenditure incurred during the war. Harare has written to Kinshasa insisting on US$1 billion compensation, but its demands have been resisted and ignored. Zimbabwe wants to be compensated for losses of military equipment, supplies, and monies spent on operations and consumables. However, the DRC insists Zimbabwe was paid through minerals.

Zimbabwe was given mining contracts in the DRC during the war, resulting in military companies mining diamonds. The contracts have been cancelled.

Zimbabwe, still bruised by its costly involvement in the Great Lakes war between 1998 and 2002, where it sustained heavy military, human and financial losses, is not sending troops to the DRC this time despite the dramatic seizure this week of the main eastern town of Goma by rebels, amid threats of an assault on the capital Kinshasa.

Mnangagwa has been to South Africa, Zambia, Mozambique, Angola, Botswana and Namibia.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 5
  • comment-avatar
    Ndonga 6 years ago

    “Mnangagwa told his DRC counterpart that he needs money to run his election campaign. He asked for Kabila’s assistance in that regard”.

    I hope that I am reading these sentences wrongly.

    How can Zimbabwe spend huge amounts of scarce Zimbabwe Government money in helping the DRC Government in their ongoing civil war. And then Mnangagwa expecting the repayment of this debt to be made to his political party and not the Zimbabwe Government?

    It seems clear that our new Number One learned a lot at the knee of our old Number One…

    Or was that our Number Two…?

  • comment-avatar

    If this story is true, Mnangagwa, someone who participated in the war of liberation, does not appear to be ideologically astute. First he should demand compensation from Britain for allowing Ian Douglas Smith to wage a 15-year war against innocent black Zimbabweans. This compensation if properly evaluated runs into over US$5 Trillion. The second is colonial reparations from the Queen of England (the monarchy) for the land and livestock dispossession of Zimbabweans from 1890 by Cecil John Rhodes and the white settlers. The reparations for colonialism should also include compensation for lives lost and injuries. These reparations if properly evaluated should exceed US$10 Trillion.

    These are the issues ZANU-PF should be prioritizing not trying to burden DRC another victim of colonialism.

    • comment-avatar

      you idiot…smith was not British and declared UNILATERAL independence from the realm…learn some history…

  • comment-avatar
    Rober 6 years ago

    Zimbabweans…
    No Revolution..
    No change..
    No Balls…
    Live with it and stop whingeing and expecting others to have the revolution for you because you don’t have the balls to have your own.

  • comment-avatar
    MUNYARADZI MARE 6 years ago

    MY DURBAN LAWYERS FOR HUMAN RIGHTS FILE CREATED BY DRC CITIZENS AND NOT ZIMBABWEANS THAT WHY THEY DON’T KNOW ITS CONTENTS .