Background Note: Republic of the Congo
Background Note: Republic of the Congo
November 2009
Bureau of African Affairs
PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of the Congo
Geography
Area: 342,000 sq. km (132,000 sq. mi.); slightly larger
than New Mexico.
Cities: Capital--Brazzaville (pop.
800,000). Other cities--Pointe-Noire (450,000), Dolisie
(150,000).
Climate: Tropical. Tropical jungle in the
North (country seasonally split--half lies above the
Equator; half below the Equator).
Terrain: Coastal
plains, fertile valleys, central plateau, forested flood
plains.
People
Nationality: Noun and
adjective--Congolese (sing. and pl.).
Population (July
2009 est.): 4,012,809.
Annual growth rate (2008 est.):
2.754%.
Ethnic groups: 15 principal Bantu groups; more
than 70 subgroups. Largest groups are Bacongo, Vili, Bateke,
M'Bochi, and Sangha. Also present is a small population
(less than 100,000) of Pygmies, ethnically unrelated to the
Bantu majority.
Religions: Traditional beliefs 50%,
Roman Catholic 35%, other Christian 15%, Muslim 2%.
Languages: French (official), Lingala and Munukutuba
(national).
Health: Infant mortality rate (2008
est.)--79.78 deaths/1,000 live births. Life expectancy (2009
est.)--54.15 yrs.
Work force: About 40% of population,
two-thirds of whom work in agriculture.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: August 15, 1960.
Constitution: New constitution adopted in nationwide
referendum on January 20, 2002.
Branches:
Executive--president (chief of state), Council of Ministers
(cabinet). Legislative--bicameral legislature made up of a
Senate and a National Assembly. Judicial--Supreme Court,
Court of Accounts and Budgetary Discipline, Courts of Appeal
(Title VIII of the 2002 constitution), and the
Constitutional Court (Title IX of the 2002 constitution).
Other--Economic Council and Human Rights Commission.
Administrative subdivisions: 10 departments, divided
into districts, plus the capital district.
Political
parties: More than 100 new parties formed (but not all
function) since multi-party democracy was introduced in
1990. The largest are the Pan-African Union for Social
Democracy (UPADS), Congolese Labor Party (PCT), Congolese
Movement for Democracy and Integral Development (MCDDI),
Coalition for Democracy and Social Progress (RDPS),
Coalition for Democracy and Development (RDD), Union of
Democratic Forces (UFD), Union of Democratic Renewal (URD),
Union for Development and Social Progress (UDPS). Following
the June-October 1997 war and the 1998-99 civil conflict,
many parties, including UPADS and MCDDI, were left in
disarray as their leadership fled the country. By 2007, many
of the leaders had returned, with the notable exception of
former President Pascal Lissouba.
Suffrage: Universal
adult.
Economy
GDP (2008 est.): $15.6 billion.
Real GDP growth rate (2008 est.): 5.6%
Per capita
income (2008 est.): $4,000.
Inflation (2008 est.): 5%.
Natural resources: Petroleum, wood, potash, lead, zinc,
uranium, phosphates, natural gas, hydropower.
Structure
of production (2001): Government and services--40.3%;
petroleum sector--38.9%; agriculture and forestry--10.5%;
utilities and industry--6.0%; other--4.3%.
Agriculture:
Products--manioc, sugar, rice, corn, peanuts, vegetables,
coffee, cocoa, forest products. Land--less than 2%
cultivated.
Trade (2008 est.): Exports--$9.009 billion
(f.o.b.): petroleum (89% of export earnings), lumber,
plywood, sugar, cocoa, coffee, diamonds. Exports to the U.S.
(2007 est.)--$3.099 billion. Imports--$2.722 billion
(f.o.b.): capital equipment, construction materials,
foodstuffs. Imports from the U.S. (2007 est.)--$140 million.
PEOPLE
Congo's sparse population is concentrated in
the southwestern portion of the country, leaving the vast
areas of tropical jungle in the north virtually uninhabited.
Thus, Congo is one of the most urbanized countries in
Africa, with 70% of its total population living in
Brazzaville, Pointe-Noire, or along the 332-mile railway
that connects them. In southern rural areas, industrial and
commercial activity suffered as a consequence of the civil
wars in the late 1990s. Except in Kouilou province and
Pointe Noire, commercial activity other than subsistence
activity came nearly to a halt. A slow recovery began in
2000 and continued in 2008.
Before the 1997 war, about 9,000 Europeans and other non-Africans lived in Congo, most of whom were French. Only a fraction of this number remains. The number of American citizens residing in Congo typically hovers around 300.
HISTORY
First inhabited by
Pygmies, Congo was later settled by Bantu groups that also
occupied parts of present-day Angola, Gabon, and Democratic
Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire), forming the basis
for ethnic affinities and rivalries among those states.
Several Bantu kingdoms--notably those of the Kongo, the
Loango, and the Teke--built trade links leading into the
Congo River basin. The first European contacts came in the
late 15th century, and commercial relationships were quickly
established with the kingdoms--trading for slaves captured
in the interior The coastal area was a major source for the
transatlantic slave trade, and when that commerce ended in
the early 19th century, the power of the Bantu kingdoms
eroded.
The area came under French sovereignty in the 1880s. Pierre Savorgnon de Brazza, a French empire builder, competed with agents of Belgian King Leopold's International Congo Association (later Zaire) for control of the Congo River basin. Between 1882 and 1891, treaties were secured with all the main local rulers on the river's right bank, placing their lands under French protection. In 1908, France organized French Equatorial Africa (AEF), comprising its colonies of Middle Congo (modern Congo), Gabon, Chad, and Oubangui-Chari (modern Central African Republic). Brazzaville was selected as the federal capital.
Economic development during the first 50 years of colonial rule in Congo centered on natural resource extraction by private companies. In 1924-34, the Congo-Ocean Railway (CFCO) was built at a considerable human and financial cost, opening the way for growth of the ocean port of Pointe-Noire and towns along its route.
During World War II, the AEF administration sided with Charles DeGaulle, and Brazzaville became the symbolic capital of Free France during 1940-43. The Brazzaville Conference of 1944 heralded a period of major reform in French colonial policy, including the abolition of forced labor, granting of French citizenship to colonial subjects, decentralization of certain powers, and election of local advisory assemblies. Congo benefited from the postwar expansion of colonial administrative and infrastructure spending as a result of its central geographic location within AEF and the federal capital at Brazzaville.
The Loi Cadre (framework law) of 1956 ended dual voting roles and provided for partial self-government for the individual overseas territories. Ethnic rivalries then produced sharp struggles among the emerging Congolese political parties and sparked severe riots in Brazzaville in 1959. After the September 1958 referendum approving the new French Constitution, AEF was dissolved. Its four territories became autonomous members of the French Community, and Middle Congo was renamed the Congo Republic. Formal independence was granted in August 1960.
Congo's first President was Fulbert Youlou, a former Catholic priest from the Pool region in the southeast. He rose to political prominence after 1956, and was narrowly elected President by the National Assembly at independence. Youlou's 3 years in power were marked by ethnic tensions and political rivalry. In August 1963, Youlou was overthrown in a 3-day popular uprising (Les Trois Glorieuses) led by labor elements and joined by rival political parties. All members of the Youlou government were arrested or removed from office. The Congolese military took charge of the country briefly and installed a civilian provisional government headed by Alphonse Massamba-Debat. Under the 1963 constitution, Massamba-Debat was elected President for a 5-year term and named Pascal Lissouba to serve as Prime Minister. However, President Massamba-Debat's term ended abruptly in August 1968, when Capt. Marien Ngouabi and other army officers toppled the government in a coup. After a period of consolidation under the newly formed National Revolutionary Council, Major Ngouabi assumed the presidency on December 31, 1968. One year later, President Ngouabi proclaimed Congo to be Africa's first "people's republic" and announced the decision of the National Revolutionary Movement to change its name to the Congolese Labor Party (PCT).
On March 18, 1977, President Ngouabi was assassinated. Although the persons accused of shooting Ngouabi were tried and some of them executed, the motivation behind the assassination is still not clear. An 11-member Military Committee of the Party (CMP) was named to head an interim government with Colonel (later General) Joachim Yhomby-Opango to serve as President of the Republic. Accused of corruption and deviation from party directives, Yhomby-Opango was removed from office on February 5, 1979, by the Central Committee of the PCT, which then simultaneously designated Vice President and Defense Minister Col. Denis Sassou-Nguesso as interim President. The Central Committee directed Sassou-Nguesso to take charge of preparations for the Third Extraordinary Congress of the PCT, which proceeded to elect him President of the Central Committee and President of the Republic. Under a congressional resolution, Yhomby-Opango was stripped of all powers, rank, and possessions and placed under arrest to await trial for high treason. He was released from house arrest in late 1984 and ordered back to his native village of Owando.
After two decades of turbulent politics bolstered by Marxist-Leninist rhetoric, and with the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Congolese gradually moderated their economic and political views to the point that, in 1992, Congo completed a transition to multi-party democracy. Ending a long history of one-party Marxist rule, a specific agenda for this transition was laid out during Congo's national conference of 1991 and culminated in August 1992 with multi-party presidential elections. Sassou-Nguesso conceded defeat and Congo's new President, Prof. Pascal Lissouba, was inaugurated on August 31, 1992.
Congolese democracy experienced severe trials in 1993 and early 1994. President Lissouba dissolved the National Assembly in November 1992, calling for new elections in May 1993. The results of those elections were disputed, touching off violent civil unrest in June and again in November. In February 1994, all parties accepted the decisions of an international board of arbiters, and the risk of large-scale insurrection subsided.
However, Congo's democratic progress was derailed in 1997. As presidential elections scheduled for July 1997 approached, tensions between the Lissouba and Sassou-Nguesso camps mounted. When President Lissouba's government forces surrounded Sassou-Nguesso's compound in Brazzaville with armored vehicles on June 5, Sassou-Nguesso ordered his militia to resist. Thus began a 4-month conflict that destroyed or damaged much of Brazzaville. In early October, Angolan troops invaded Congo on the side of Sassou-Nguesso and, in mid-October, the Lissouba government fell. Soon thereafter, Sassou-Nguesso declared himself President and named a 33-member government.
In January 1998, the Sassou-Nguesso regime held a National Forum for Reconciliation to determine the nature and duration of the transition period. The forum, tightly controlled by the government, decided elections should be held in about 3 years, elected a transition advisory legislature, and announced that a constitutional convention would finalize a draft constitution. However, the eruption in late 1998 of fighting between Sassou-Nguesso's government forces and a pro-Lissouba and pro-Kolelas armed opposition disrupted the transition to democracy. This new violence also closed the economically vital Brazzaville-Pointe Noire railroad, caused great destruction and loss of life in southern Brazzaville and in the Pool, Bouenza, and Niari regions, and displaced hundreds of thousands of persons. In November and December 1999, the government signed agreements with representatives of many, though not all, of the rebel groups.
The December accord, mediated by President Omar Bongo of Gabon, called for follow-on, inclusive political negotiations between the government and the opposition. During the years 2000-2001, Sassou-Nguesso's government conducted a national dialogue (Dialogue Sans Exclusif), in which the opposition parties and the government agreed to continue on the path to peace. Ex-President Lissouba and ex-Prime Minister Kolelas refused to agree and were exiled. They were tried in absentia and convicted in Brazzaville of charges ranging from treason to misappropriation of government funds. Ex-militiamen were granted amnesty, and many were provided micro-loans to aid their reintegration into civil society. Not all opposition members participated. One group, referred to as "Ninjas," actively opposed the government in a low-level guerrilla war in the Pool region of the country. Other members of opposition parties have returned and have opted to participate to some degree in political life.
A new constitution was drafted in 2001, approved by the provisional legislature (National Transition Council), and approved by the people of Congo in a national referendum in January 2002. Presidential elections were held in March 2002, and Sassou-Nguesso was declared the winner. Legislative elections were held in May and June 2002. In March 2003 the government signed a peace accord with the Ninjas, and the country has remained stable and calm since the signing. Internally displaced persons are returning to the Pool region. President Sassou-Nguesso allowed Kolelas to return to Congo for his wife's funeral in October 2005 and subsequently asked that Parliament grant Kolelas amnesty. Parliament complied with Sassou-Nguesso's request in December 2005.
In 2007, Sassou-Nguesso announced he would allow the return of former president Pascal Lissouba, along with a pardon for the 2001 in absentia conviction for “economic crimes” for which Lissouba had been sentenced to 30 years. By October 2009, Lissouba had still not returned to the country. Now a health condition requiring regular treatment not available in Brazzaville seems to be the only real obstacle to his return. Former prime minister Joachim Yhombi-Opango returned to the country in August 2007 after the Council of Ministers granted him amnesty in May for a 2001 conviction in absentia for allegedly improperly selling the country’s oil while in office. Legislative elections were held in June and August 2007 and were widely viewed as disorganized and marred by irregularities, with low voter turnout. Presidential elections were held in July 2009, and Sassou-Nguesso was declared the winner.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Before the 1997
war, the Congolese system of government was similar to that
of the French. However, after taking power, Sassou-Nguesso
suspended the constitution approved in 1992 upon which this
system was based. The 2002 constitution provides for a
7-year presidential term, limited to a maximum of two
sequential terms. There is a parliament of two houses, whose
members serve for 5 years.
Principal Government Officials
President--Denis Sassou-Nguesso
Minister of State,
Coordinator of the pole of Basic Infrastructure, in charge
of Transport, Civil Aviation and Maritime Shipping--Isidore
Mvoumba
Minister of State, Coordinator of the Economical
pole, in charge of the Economy, Government Planning, Land
Reform and Integration--Pierre Moussa
Minister of State,
Coordinator of the Sovereignty pole, in charge of Justice
and Human Rights, and Keeper of the Great Seal--Aimé
Emmanuel Yoka
Minister of State, Coordinator of the
Socio-cultural pole, in charge of Labor and Social
Security--Florent Tsiba
Minister of Foreign Affairs and
Relations with Francophone Countries--Basile Ikouebe
Minister of Economy, Finance and Budget--Pacifique
Issoibeka
Ambassador to the United States--Serge
Mombouli
Ambassador to the United Nations--Serge Balle
The Congo maintains an embassy in the United States at 4891 Colorado Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20011 (tel: 202-726-5500). The Congolese Mission to the United Nations is at 14 East 65th Street, New York, NY 10021 (tel: 212-744-7840).
ECONOMY
The Congo's economy is based
primarily on its petroleum sector, which is by far the
country's major revenue earner. The Congolese oil sector is
dominated by the French oil company Total. In second
position is the Italian oil firm ENI. The two American
players in the petroleum production sector are Chevron and
Murphy Oil. Chevron is a longtime player in the Congolese
market, but they play a limited role in 30-70 non-operator
joint venture partnership with Total. Chevron finances
Total’s projects, but is not currently involved in
exploration or production. Murphy Oil exported its first
shipment of 600,000 barrels of oil in October 2009 and is
currently producing 15,000 barrels per day, or about 5% of
Congo’s daily production. American companies including
Baker-Hughes, Halliburton, Nabors, Schlumberger, and
Weatherford also have an important stake in the oil services
sector. The return of stability to Congo is also leading to
increased foreign investment in other areas. President
Sassou-Nguesso sees the industrialization of the Congo as a
key component of his plan to modernize Congo. Mineral
extraction is one key growth sector. MagMinerals, a Canadian
company, recently began construction of a new potash mine
that is expected to produce 1.2 million tons of potash per
year by 2013. This will make Congo the largest producer of
potash in Africa. The President’s plans also call for new
lead, zinc, and copper concessions. There are also plans in
the works to revitalize Congo’s agricultural sector,
through a long-term land lease agreement of some 100-200,000
hectares of idle farmland to a consortium of South African
farmers.
The country's abundant northern rain forests are the source of timber. Forestry, which led Congolese exports before the discovery of oil, now generates less than 7% of export earnings. Wood production came to a standstill during the war years but has recommenced, and new concessions were leased in 2001.
Earlier in the 1990s, Congo's major employer was the state bureaucracy, which had 80,000 employees on its payroll--enormous for a country of Congo's size. The World Bank and other international financial institutions pressured Congo to institute sweeping civil service reforms in order to reduce the size of the state bureaucracy and pare back a civil service payroll that amounted to more than 20% of GDP in 1993. The effort to cut back began in 1994 with a 50% devaluation that cut the payroll in half in dollar terms. By the middle of 1994, there was a reduction of nearly 8,000 in civil service employees.
Between 1994-1996, the Congolese economy underwent a difficult transition. The prospects for building the foundation of a healthy economy, however, were better than at any time in the previous 15 years. Congo took a number of measures to liberalize its economy, including reforming the tax, investment, labor, timber, and hydrocarbon codes. In 2002-2003 Congo privatized key parastatals, primarily banks, telecommunications, and transportation monopolies, to help improve a dilapidated and unreliable infrastructure.
By the end of 1996, Congo had made substantial progress in various areas targeted for reform. It made significant strides toward macroeconomic stabilization through improving public finances and restructuring external debt. This change was accompanied by improvements in the structure of expenditures, with a reduction in personnel expenditures. Further, Congo benefited from debt restructuring from a Paris Club agreement in July 1996.
This reform program came to a halt, however, in early June 1997 when war broke out, and the return of armed conflict in 1998-99 hindered economic reform and recovery. President Sassou-Nguesso has moved forward on improved governance, economic reforms, and privatization, as well as on cooperation with international financial institutions. President Sassou-Nguesso also has made speeches outlining the need for good governance and transparency in the Congo, particularly during his 2003 and 2004 National Day Addresses.
Before June 1997, Congo and the United States ratified a bilateral investment treaty designed to facilitate and protect foreign investment. The country also adopted a new investment code intended to attract foreign capital. The country has made some commendable efforts at political and economic reform, but despite these successes, Congo's investment climate has challenges, offering few meaningful incentives for new investors. High costs for labor, energy, raw materials, and transportation; a restrictive labor code; low productivity and high production costs; and a deteriorating transportation infrastructure have been among the factors discouraging investment. Five years of civil conflict (1997-2003) further damaged infrastructure, though the privatization of some statal and parastatal enterprises has generated some interest from U.S. companies.
In March 2006, the World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the Paris Club group of official creditor countries approved interim debt relief for Congo under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative, noting that Congo had performed satisfactorily on an IMF-supported reform program and developed an interim Poverty Reduction Strategy. Resources that are freed by interim debt relief granted to Congo must be used for poverty reduction under a reform program closely monitored by the international financial institutions. The London Club of commercial creditors and Congolese Government also signed an agreement in November 2007 forgiving 77% of the country’s London Club debt. In 2007, however, Congo’s reform program went off-track, leading the Paris Club and the international financial institutions to suspend their debt relief measures. The poverty reduction program has been marked by continued delays, and progress in 2008 was incremental at best. In late 2008, Congo re-engaged with the IMF and World Bank, paving the way for a new IMF program that the IMF Executive Board approved in December 2008 and a new Paris Club agreement with Congo that resumed interim debt relief.
Congo still needs to address serious concerns about governance and financial transparency in order to complete the HIPC Initiative process and qualify for additional debt cancellation. Specifically, Congo needs to reform its procurement code and the forestry sector and needs to improve petroleum sector transparency. The Congo Government continues to face lawsuits from companies who purchase the country’s debt at deep discounts on the secondary markets and then attempt to recover the full value of the debt through Western legal systems.
In November 2007, Congo was readmitted to the Kimberley Process, an international multi-stakeholder initiative designed to stem the trade of conflict diamonds. Congo had been suspended from the Kimberley Process in 2004 after reviews showed its diamond exports vastly outnumbered its production capacity. Congo’s government estimates current diamond capacity to be 5,000 carats, with a potential for 50,000 to 70,000 carats.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
For the two decades
preceding Congo's 1991 national conference, the country was
firmly in the socialist camp, allied principally with the
Soviet Union and other Eastern bloc nations. Educational,
economic, and foreign aid links between Congo and its
Eastern bloc allies were extensive, with the Congolese
military and security forces receiving significant Soviet,
East German, and Cuban assistance.
France, the former colonial power, maintained a continuing but somewhat subdued relationship with Congo, offering a variety of cultural, educational, and economic assistance. The principal element in the French-Congolese relationship was the highly successful oil sector investment of the French petroleum parastatal Elf-Aquitaine (now called Total), which entered the Congo in 1968 and has continued to grow.
After the worldwide collapse of communism and Congo's adoption of multi-party democracy in 1991, Congo's bilateral relations with its former socialist allies became relatively less important. France is now by far Congo's principal external partner, contributing significant amounts of economic assistance, while playing a highly influential role. However, there is a growing interest in attracting American investors.
Congo is a member of the United Nations, African Union, African Development Bank, World Trade Organization (WTO), Central African Economic and Monetary Community (CEMAC), Central African Customs and Economic Union (UDEAC), International Coffee Organization, Economic Community of Central African States ECCAS/CEEAC), INTERPOL, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the Nonaligned Movement, and the Group of 77. Congo held a seat on the United Nations Security Council during 2006-2007. In January 2006, President Sassou-Nguesso was elected for a one-year term as Chairman of the African Union.
U.S.-CONGOLESE RELATIONS
Diplomatic relations between
the United States and Congo were broken during the most
radical Congolese-Marxist period, 1965-77. The U.S. Embassy
reopened in 1977 with the restoration of relations, which
remained distant until the end of the socialist era. The
late 1980s were marked by a progressive warming of Congolese
relations with Western countries, including the United
States. Congolese President Denis Sassou-Nguesso made a
state visit to Washington in 1990, where he was received by
President George H.W. Bush.
With the advent of democracy in 1991, Congo's relations with the United States improved and were cooperative. The United States has enthusiastically supported Congolese democratization efforts, contributing aid to the country's electoral process. The Congolese Government demonstrated an active interest in deepening and broadening its relations with the United States. Transition Prime Minister Andre Milongo made an official visit to Washington in 1992, where President Bush received him at the White House.
Then-presidential candidate Pascal Lissouba traveled to Washington in 1992, meeting with a variety of officials, including Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Herman J. Cohen. After his election in August 1992, President Lissouba expressed interest in expanding U.S.-Congo links, seeking increased U.S. development aid, university exchanges, and greater U.S. investment in Congo.
With the outbreak of the 1997 war, the U.S. Embassy was evacuated. The Embassy was closed, and its personnel became resident in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo. In 2001 suspensions on Embassy operations were lifted, and Embassy personnel were allowed to travel to Brazzaville for periods of extended temporary duty from the U.S. Embassy in Kinshasa In 2003, U.S.-Congo bilateral relations were reinvigorated, and a site for construction of a new Embassy was acquired in July 2004. Diplomatic activities, operations, and programs were carried out in a temporary bank location until January 2009, when a new, fully functioning Embassy was opened. Relations between the United States and the government of President Denis Sassou-Nguesso are strong, positive, and cooperative.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Alan W. Eastham
Deputy Chief of
Mission--Jonathan Pratt
Management Officer--Vanessa
Brooks
Office Manager--Pamela Aulton
Consular
Officer--Chris McHone
Public Diplomacy/Economic
Officer--Shayna Cram
The U.S. Embassy in Congo is located on Boulevard Maya-Maya (also called Boulevard de l’Aeroport), Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo (tel: 242-612-2000; no fax capability). American citizens may email the Embassy at BrazzavilleACS@state.gov.
TRAVEL AND
BUSINESS INFORMATION
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For the latest security information, Americans living and traveling abroad should regularly monitor the Department's Bureau of Consular Affairs Internet web site at http://www.travel.state.gov, where the current Worldwide Caution, Travel Alerts, and Travel Warnings can be found. Consular Affairs Publications, which contain information on obtaining passports and planning a safe trip abroad, are also available at http://www.travel.state.gov. For additional information on international travel, see http://www.usa.gov/Citizen/Topics/Travel/International.shtml.
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