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- <text id=93TT1016>
- <title>
- Feb. 22, 1993: Leaving Fire in His Wake
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 22, 1993 Uncle Bill Wants You
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 54
- Leaving Fire in His Wake
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As anarchy grows around him, Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire serenely
- enjoys lobster and champagne in his jungle paradise
- </p>
- <p>By ADAM ZAGORIN/GBADOLITE
- </p>
- <p> Shafts of equatorial sunshine pierce the jungle canopy and
- stained-glass windows of a tiny chapel, capturing the dictator's
- head in a halo of multicolored light. An imposing man in a gray
- sharkskin suit and shiny black shoes, he clasps his large hands
- and kneels in prayer, silently reciting the Eucharist service.
- </p>
- <p> Zaire's President Mobutu Sese Seko seldom misses Sunday Mass.
- It is a ritual he has faithfully observed during his nearly
- 30 years of absolute power, a tenure marked by the torture and
- killing of his opponents and corruption that has funneled much
- of his nation's wealth into his private pocket. Now 62 and in
- robust health, Mobutu governs from his native fiefdom of Gbadolite,
- a jungle village close to the equator. Surrounded at all times
- by heavily armed troops, he remains impervious to the growing
- clamor among 35 million Zairians for an end to his disastrously
- autocratic rule.
- </p>
- <p> "If my people need me," Mobutu says with a smile, "I can certainly
- remain in power for another five, 10 or even 20 years." Any
- hope that he will peacefully step aside is belied by the name
- he took for himself several years after he seized power in the
- 1960s: Mobutu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbendu wa za Banga (the all powerful
- warrior who, because of his endurance and inflexible will to
- win, shall go from conquest to conquest, leaving fire in his
- wake).
- </p>
- <p> After church, Mobutu joins guests for a flute of his favorite
- pink Laurent Perrier champagne at the nearby presidential palace.
- Like an amiable monarch amid courtiers, he bows gracefully to
- kiss a woman's hand and banters politely with a local Jesuit
- priest before herding everyone across an immense terrace toward
- a buffet laden with lobster and thick steaks. In the 100 degrees
- heat, a wave of satisfaction seems to envelop the presidential
- party, a sense that all is still well in this remote hinterland
- far from the chaos afflicting the rest of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Mobutu's personal fortune, built on a network of private businesses,
- the pilfering of public resources and skimming the foreign aid
- that has flowed into his country, has been estimated at $5 billion.
- He has bank accounts in Switzerland and other countries, an
- apartment on Avenue Foch in Paris, a palatial villa at Cap-Martin
- on the French Riviera and other residences in Spain, Portugal,
- Morocco and Senegal. When pressed, he swears on his "honor as
- a Christian and a chief" that his available funds amount to
- "no more than $10 million." He does concede, however, that this
- absurdly low figure does not include his foreign real estate
- holdings and other assets he does not consider liquid.
- </p>
- <p> In Gbadolite, Mobutu lives in a series of garish palaces guarded
- by soldiers drawn from his own Bangala tribe. An early riser,
- he often tunes in newscasts via satellites. It was after watching
- the televised execution of his old friend President Nicolae
- Ceaucescu of Romania, for example, that he decided to embark
- Zaire on its now stalled "transition to democracy." After breakfast
- he accords audiences that can stretch into the afternoon; then
- he relaxes with his family or studies biographies of men he
- admires, including Napoleon and De Gaulle. Mobutu is fascinated
- by Machiavelli, whose treatise The Prince he used to keep at
- his bedside.
- </p>
- <p> These days he avoids trips to the capital or other major cities,
- although the Gbadolite village airstrip can accommodate the
- supersonic Concorde that Mobutu charters from Air France as
- well as a number of Boeing jets in the presidential fleet. Exquisite
- flower gardens and vast plantations of pineapple imbue Gbadolite
- with an air of bucolic tranquillity. But it is a Potemkin village:
- most of the electricity is switched off when the dictator and
- his circle are absent, leaving thousands of townspeople to fend
- for themselves in the tropical darkness.
- </p>
- <p> His hold on power is based on his brutality, his control of
- key military units and broadcast media, and his elite security
- forces. But there is also a personal element: his knack for
- co-opting former enemies is little short of amazing. Nguza Karl-i-Bond,
- who published an account of brutal tortures inflicted on him
- by Mobutu's minions, later proceeded to serve him twice as Prime
- Minister. As Mobutu shifts appointees in and out of office,
- sometimes on a monthly basis, erstwhile opponents have shown
- a willingness to return to his orbit, occasionally banking tidy
- sums in the process.
- </p>
- <p> Equally noteworthy has been Mobutu's quest for sexual favors
- among the wives of political associates. "The President enjoys
- an almost feudal droit du seigneur," explains a former Cabinet
- minister. "He uses sex as a tool to dominate the men around
- him. You get money or a Mercedes-Benz, and he takes your wife
- and you work for him." Says a former longtime resident of Gbadolite:
- "The complaints of those he has cuckolded only add to his mystique
- as a virile and powerful ruler."
- </p>
- <p> Outside Gbadolite, Mobutu's hold on power is more tenuous. More
- than a thousand miles away in the teeming slums and decaying
- center of Kinshasa, Zaire's capital, hundreds of people have
- died in the past month in clashes with Mobutu's Israeli-trained
- security forces. Looting by unpaid military units has ravaged
- the city, obliging Belgium and France to send troops to rescue
- most of their remaining nationals. Both countries, joined by
- the U.S., have demanded that Mobutu proceed immediately with
- a transition to democracy that he initiated in 1990 and has
- since halted.
- </p>
- <p> Until recently, Mobutu was considered a close strategic ally
- and personal friend by President George Bush. This week, however,
- the Clinton Administration may announce tough economic and diplomatic
- sanctions targeted personally at the Zairian leader. "I am the
- latest victim of the cold war, no longer needed by the U.S.,"
- the dictator says bitterly. "The lesson is that my support for
- American policy counts for nothing."
- </p>
- <p> An unarmed opposition is precariously united behind Prime Minister
- Etienne Tshisekedi, a human-rights activist and a bitter personal
- enemy of the President's. Last week each accused the other of
- treason as Mobutu tried to dismiss Tshisekedi, who adamantly
- refuses to step down. "The killings in recent weeks have only
- made Mobutu stronger," cautions a senior Western diplomat, who
- notes that the dictator's demise has often been forecast before.
- "He clearly calculates that the physical elimination of a few
- of his enemies will have a deterrent effect on the rest of the
- population."
- </p>
- <p> The danger is that Zaire, a vast territory 20% larger than Mexico,
- could begin to disintegrate, plunging its 250-odd tribal groups
- into a nightmarish civil war of the kind that has left tens
- of thousands dead in Somalia and Liberia. Shortages of food
- and gasoline are severe; road and rail links between major cities
- have been virtually swallowed by the encroaching jungle. Even
- in the capital's Mama Yemo hospital--named for Mobutu's deceased
- mother--children suffer without medication, and hundreds of
- victims of the AIDS epidemic die untreated. In the trackless
- bush, where millions of peasants and tribesmen still live, the
- scourges of leprosy, trypanosomiasis and malaria are again pandemic.
- </p>
- <p> With inflation at 7,000%, banks are closed and people shop clutching
- sacks full of almost useless paper currency. Zaire's central
- monetary authority, which Mobutu has in the past treated as
- a personal piggy bank, is virtually bankrupt. Not long ago,
- a private German printer, claiming it had not been paid, halted
- shipments to Kinshasa of thousands of metric tons of new Zairian
- currency needed to keep up with local inflation.
- </p>
- <p> Mobutu rose to power in part because of his native ability as
- a leader and orator and his physical courage in the face of
- danger, qualities that impressed the CIA and other sponsors.
- "I was given a number of individuals to spot and assess," recalls
- Larry Devlin, the CIA agent who guided Mobutu in the early 1960s.
- "Even though he was only 29 at the time, everyone who saw him
- recognized his intelligence and personal presence; he acted
- like an African leader--understanding his supporters as well
- as his opponents; he was the best political mind on the scene."
- Mobutu's personal ambition meshed with America's strategic needs.
- As Devlin says dryly, "We needed him and he needed us."
- </p>
- <p> With the CIA's help, Mobutu stepped into the power vacuum that
- followed the Belgian Congo's chaotic independence in 1960. Staging
- a bloodless coup, he took power, only to hand it back to a civilian
- President. The next year, ousted Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba,
- who had turned increasingly to the Soviet Union for support,
- was assassinated in an operation that benefited both Mobutu
- and the CIA. "I received instructions to see that Lumumba was
- removed from the world," recalls Devlin. "I received poison
- toothpaste, among other devices, but never used them." Mobutu
- seized control for good in a second coup, in 1965.
- </p>
- <p> During Mobutu's early years as President, he was hailed as an
- exemplar of the new breed of postcolonial African leader. He
- brought a fragile unity to his country, built schools and hospitals
- and forged a nonaligned approach to foreign policy. But as Zaire
- reeled under his economic mismanagement, compounded by the 1973
- oil shock and a sharp drop in the price of copper exports, Mobutu
- resorted to calamitous improvisation. Following a trip to China,
- he launched a showy "authenticity" campaign designed to reduce
- Western influence and return his country to its African roots.
- Many foreign assets were nationalized, giving Mobutu tighter
- control over those sources of income.
- </p>
- <p> Mobutu still managed to cut a dashing if reptilian figure on
- the international stage. Resplendent in his leopardskin toque,
- symbol of his authority as a traditional tribal chief, the jovial
- dictator has had little difficulty charming nearly all U.S.
- Presidents stretching back to John Kennedy. Political friendships
- with a long line of leaders in China, Romania, France, North
- Korea, South Africa and Israel (where he trained as a paratrooper)
- made him a widely traveled statesman. Some were seduced by Mobutu's
- eagerness to serve as a bulwark against Soviet expansion in
- the heart of Africa, others by Zaire's natural treasure trove
- of diamonds, gold, cobalt, copper, and the uranium used in the
- American nuclear bombs dropped on Japan in World War II.
- </p>
- <p> As Mobutu never tires of saying, whenever the U.S. needed a
- favor, he was usually delighted to oblige. He turned over facilities
- to the CIA in support of Jonas Savimbi, an American client in
- the still festering Angolan civil war, and helped train forces
- loyal to Hissene Habre, the West's ousted candidate for leadership
- in Chad. Zaire chaired the U.N. Security Council in January
- 1991 when the crucial votes were taken to approve military action
- against Iraq in the Gulf War. A senior U.S. official says Washington
- suggested to Kuwait that Mobutu's vote in favor of allied military
- strikes be generously rewarded. That initiative could be viewed
- as an attempt to circumvent U.S. law, which has for several
- years banned all but humanitarian aid to Zaire.
- </p>
- <p> Impulsive and generous to a fault with relatives and friends,
- Mobutu must contend with their incessant demands for money and
- favors. One major distraction has been a feud between children
- of his late first wife Marie-Antoinette and those of his second,
- Bobi Ladawa. Another has been rivalry between Bobi Ladawa and
- her identical twin, a widow whom Mobutu took as a mistress some
- years ago and with whom he promptly had several children. Though
- such behavior has roots in African tradition, it has led to
- raucous family turmoil that represents a significant drain on
- the time Mobutu devotes to statecraft.
- </p>
- <p> As he sits on his terrace and watches an array of computer-controlled
- fountains dance to the easy-listening melodies from his sound
- system, with an officer in camouflage fatigues standing at attention
- nearby, Mobutu shows no signs of fearing the turmoil that threatens
- to engulf him. "I have rendered my country and people an enormous
- service," he says, beckoning to a servant who rushes up with
- an iced Baccarat tumbler of Coca-Cola. "They owe me everything."
- Then why not hold elections? "I plan to. I would win them."
- Then he leans back in his gold thronelike chair, staring into
- the distant jungle. "If ever I leave power, it will be only
- in conditions of beauty, never under pressure."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-