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By E. Munshya wa Munshya

To treat a topic of this nature, a definition of terms is in order. Being of Congolese origin or heritage is a complex notion. However, in this article I use it to describe Zambian citizens with sufficient Congolese connections such as culture, tribe, family, and origins. I do not wish to use this term to describe the Luba-Lunda migrations, but to latter migrations of peoples at least after the 1950s.

Levy Patrick Mwanawasa
Levy Patrick Mwanawasa

Two of Zambia’s neighbours have left an indelible mark on Zambian culture and national identity. These two countries are Malawi and Congo DR. In an earlier article, I had already pointed out the influence that Malawi and her diaspora has had on Zambian political and cultural life. It is time, therefore, for me to turn to the Congo. The Congo DR shares a 2000-kilometer border with Zambia. None of the other eight (or nine) neighbours comes close to this length. Additionally, over half of Zambia’s urban towns are within 200 kilometers of the Congolese border. Zambia shares more tribes with the Congo than any other neighbouring country. The ethnic groups that are found on both sides of the border stretch from Mwinilunga to Mwansabombwe. Among these ethnic groups are the Lunda, Luvale, Kaonde, Lamba, Lala, Ushi, and the Lunda (Kazembe). The Bemba language, spoken in more provinces of Zambia, is the staple language for much of the Congo’s Katanga province. In fact, Katanga’s major city “Lubumbashi wa Ntanshi” is a Bemba term. Historically, many Zambian tribes claim Congolese origin. That is most of them are descended from an ancient Luba-Lunda Kingdom. These tribes are as sparse as the Bemba in Northern Province to some Lozi speaking peoples within Western Province.

However, in spite of all these realities, it is quite surprising that not many people in Zambia publicly admit to Congolese heritage, origin or connections. I will begin by taking politicians as an example.

Frederick Jacob Titus CHILUBA
Frederick Jacob Titus CHILUBA

When President Frederick Chiluba was running for the presidency in 1990, he was asked whether he had any Congolese connections. His answer was to the effect that his only Congolese connection was that of ancient African history, in which his people, the Chishinga migrated from the Luba-Lunda empire to their current location along the river Luapula. By giving this answer, Chiluba refused any modern Congolese connections. He instead used the same ancient argument that his only connections to the Congo belonged to the 1800s. Notwithstanding this position, however, any person who has been to Musangu or to Mwense cannot be surprised at just how close these places are to the Congolese border. And indeed, any serious student of history will discover that Chiluba’s refusal to be connected to the Congo is a serious inconsistency. Chiluba did have the Congolese connection which he refused to admit to. But why did he? This article seeks to provide part of that answer.

President Levy Mwanawasa was born of a Lenje father and a Lamba mother (Mama Miriam Mokola). For many Zambians, they may need reminding that the Lamba people exist in both Zambia and the Congo. In fact, the Congo has more Lamba speaking peoples than Zambia. The Lambas occupy much of the Congolese pedicle and they stretch from Lubumbashi down through the pedicle to Sakania. In Zambia, the Lamba are mainly on the Copperbelt.

In Amos Malupenga’s biography of President Levy Mwanawasa, he neglects to mention any Congolese connections that Mama Miriam Mokola had. The only Congolese reference that Malupenga alludes to in his book is that the young Levy was flown to Kinshasa for medical attention after a burning accident he suffered as a child. However, throughout his life, Levy Mwanawasa refused any Congolese connections. But I should here provide a few hints that may indicate that Mwanawasa too had clear connections to the Congo, which he refused to admit to.

Mwanawasa’s mother lived in the Congo after she got divorced from Levy’s father. And he, as a student at Chiwala, did visit her on the other side of the border. Malupenga mentioned nearly all the places Mama Mokola lived in, except for one place. According to Malupenga, Mama Mokola lived in Ndola, Mufulira, Ndola rural and “another village which now has ceased to exist.” It is a village without a name. Malupenga conveniently, left out the name of this village, either because he was not told about it (it was hidden from him), or knew about it and chose not to mention it for some reason. I submit that this village has disappeared from Malupenga’s book because in reality it is on the other side of the border-it is in the Congo. This village should in all probability be between Mokambo and Sakania across the border.

The reason why Malupenga did not mention the Congo is because the Congo is a toxic heritage. Many Zambians of Congolese origin simply refuse to be connected to the Congo. That is they do not want to admit to this heritage publicly.

Additionally, the fact that the young Levy was flown to Kinshasa gives the idea that his family should have been connected to the Congo more than we are made to believe. No Zambian, without sufficient connections to Kinshasa would send their child to seek medical attention in Kinshasa in 1960. As such, Levy Mwanawasa did have sufficient Congolese connections.

In the 2006 elections, the MMD featured two very interesting candidates. One is Jerry Mukonkela for Chingola and the other is Goodward Mulubwa for Matero. Mukonkela was more forthcoming about his “Congolese” accent. A Lunda with strong Congolese heritage, Mukonkela spent some time defending his “Swahili” accent and refusing any connections to the Congo. Goodward Mulubwa also faced the same situation. A successful businessman, he addressed the Congolese suspicions by refusing any link to the Congo. From his name, you could tell he is Ushi from Luapula Province. The above-mentioned denials typical of politicians are also true for many Zambians from different strata of society. But why do Zambians of Congolese origin or connections refuse Congolese identity. The answer is steeped in history and in the Kaunda Era demonization of everything Congolese. The following paragraphs provide part of the answer.

The first reason is with the way imperialists partitioned Africa and the identity they fostered upon Africans. Armed with a stencil and a ruler, junior Belgian and British civil servants drew a map of Africa, and then demarcated it according to their wishes. They divided up families and did not care about how the new borders would impact on a nephew east of the Luapula River. In the modern geo-political states, this demarcation has caused a false sense of citizenship that has frequently led to African tribes perceiving their own tribesmen as foreigners simply because Queen Victoria and her counterpart King Leopold II decided so. This matter requires further exploration latter.

The second reason has to do with what happened at independence. Zambia’s independence came at a time that the Congo was at war. Congo DR got her independence from Belgium in 1960. However, just months into her independence the Southern Province of Katanga seceded from the mainland, and declared independence. Katanga Governor Moise Tshombe’s military and political prowess provided a serious conundrum for Northern Rhodesian Prime Minister Kenneth Kaunda.

Kaunda believed that Tshombe had recruited his soldiers from tribes that would constitute a future nation of Zambia. If left unchecked, this would bring instability for a newly independent Zambia. Additionally, Whites in Southern Rhodesia wanted to create a federation of three countries: Southern Rhodesia, Katanga and Barotseland. Kaunda was already dealing with the Barotseland crisis and did not want any further complications. Cleary in such a political set-up there was no way Kaunda was going to be friendly to Tshombe and his Katangese agenda. These political issues would create serious suspicions on Kaunda’s part for everything Katangese or Congolese. He became suspicious of his northern neighbour such that after Zambia’s independence, Kaunda’s government would treat the Congo as enemy number one.

The third reason came as a consequence of Kaunda’s policy towards the Congo. He would treat the nation itself as an enemy. Ironically, he never extended this enmity to Malawi. Could it be that he was kinder to Malawi because they were his kith and kin? What should surprise most historians is that while KK was maintaining such animosity towards Congo, his Malawian counterpart was partnering with Apartheid South Africa. In spite of this partnership between Kamuzu Banda and the South African regime, not once did Kaunda treat Kamuzu or Malawi as an enemy.

In promoting anti-Congo policies, Kaunda ostracised many Zambians of Congolese origin. Following the enactment of the 1966 National Registration Act, many Zambians of Malawian origin easily acquired green National Registration Cards. However, this was not the case for those Zambians with Congolese heritage. Additionally, Kaunda deployed an active army on the Congolese border. There were more soldiers at Konkola, Mokambo and Chembe than those stationed at Chirundu to fight Ian Smith’s incursions into Zambia.

The National Registration Act of 1966 and its implications upon Zambians’ self-identity of citizenship should be the focus of another study. Suffice here to state that the Act itself got so misunderstood that even those who qualified to be citizens of Zambia could not do so because of this misconstruction. Zambians of Congolese heritage were the biggest casualties of this Act. It is therefore interesting to note that the Supreme Court used Chabala Kafupi’s testimony in the Lewanika v Chiluba to clarify the Act. In essence a Congolese born Chabala Kafupi who claimed to be Chiluba’s father qualified for Zambian citizenship not because of acquiring an NRC, but on the basis of his being present in Zambia at independence. It is quite unusual that Mr. Chabala Kafupi of clear Congolese heritage mustered enough strength to state this fact in the Supreme Court. But he is the exception.

The fourth reason was that Kaunda enacted an economic embargo against the Congo and consequently against the Lambas, the Ushis, the Lalas and the Lundas and their relatives across the border. Instead of encouraging trade and commerce between the Congo and Zambia, Kaunda banned the export of goods to Lubumbashi. The only, way out for Zambians to profit from lucrative business between Congo and Zambia was by “smuggling through Bilanga.” This was a dangerous way of doing business as many Zambians got killed by Kaunda’s soldiers. It is for economists to calculate how much money Zambia could have made out of trade with Congo. It is only now that government is exploiting the Congo’s business potential.

Fifth, Kaunda deployed a severe academic embargo upon Zambians. Children in Zambian schools were taught very little about Congo DR. In fact, some Zambians were shocked to learn in 1986 that some Congolese are Bemba speaking. This was when Zambia played Congo in a football match in which one of the Congo players was named Kasongo Kabwe – a typical Bemba name. It is no doubt that to date very few in Zambia know that Bemba is one of the Congo’s widely spoken local languages. In fact, only two radio stations in Africa broadcast in the Bemba language – ZNBC and Radio Congo.

Kaunda’s academic embargo also manifested itself in William Banda’s testimony against Chiluba in the famous Lewanika and others v Chiluba case. Chiluba’s connection to the Congo may have been undeniable, but then Banda went for the overkill in the testimony. Banda told the Supreme Court that he had known Chiluba as a young man who hailed from Congo and spoke the Lingala language. Banda’s testimony was probably both true and false. He might have been right that Chiluba may have had sufficient Congolese connections, but by claiming that Chiluba then spoke Lingala, he fed into a false assumption that all Congolese speak Lingala or that all Congolese are “Kasais”. Indeed if Chiluba had those Congolese connections, they could have been derived from the Bemba speaking region of Katanga near the Luapula River and not anywhere near Kinshasa where Lingala is the staple language.

But William Takere Banda is not alone in this misconception of everything Congolese. Here are some facts that might be helpful. The Bemba language is one of the widely spoken languages in Katanga. Bemba speaking peoples, however, have experienced serious problems in terms of political or cultural progression in the Congo. To date Lunda Bululu is the only Bemba speaking person to have ascended to the position of Prime Minister for the Congolese republic. In Katanga itself, Moise Katumbi is the first Bemba to be governor. Before, Katumbi, Bemba-speaking Kunda Kisenga Milundu served as Katanga deputy-governor in a power sharing government after the death of Laurent Kabila. It is now becoming a possibility that Katumbi might as well be the first Bemba-speaking President of the Congo DR.

The sixth reason why Zambians of Congolese origins deny their heritage is purely as a result of prejudice and delusions. Some in Zambia characterize all Congolese as “Kasais”. Just how Bemba speaking or Lunda speaking Congolese came to be understood as Kasais in Zambia should deserve another historical analysis. However, it should be sufficient to note here that while in Zambia, some people mistake all Congolese as Kasais, Kasais in Katanga find it difficult to integrate among the Bemba and other Katangese tribes.

Indeed, some Katangese people regard the Kasais as enemies and vultures. This idea is definitely repugnant. The anti-Kasai sentiments culminated in the 1990s when Katanga governor Kyungu wa Kumwanza, enacted the “Kubatelemusha” doctrine where the Kasais were ordered deported back to Kananga and Mbuji-Mayi. Many Kasai women and children lost their lives during this ethnic cleansing. Wa Kumwanza has to-date not answered for this crime. Some of the Katanga tribes with strong anti-Kasai sentiments are Bemba speaking.

However, while some Bemba-speaking tribes are prejudiced against the Kasais in Katanga, when the same Bemba-speaking Congolese cross the border into Zambia, some Zambians do not differentiate between them and the Kasais. As such, the prejudice against the Kasai has been exported to Zambia, except that in Zambia, every one with sufficient Congolese had been for many years characterised as “Kasai”. It is this anti-Kasai sentiment from Katanga that got fed into Zambia. This characteristically led to Bemba speaking Zambians of Congolese origin to deny any Congolese heritage so that they are not characterized as “Kasai.”

Munshya wa Munshya
Munshya wa Munshya

Let me digress here to address the issue of anti-Kasai sentiments in Katanga. Obviously, the Kasai people have strong ethnic patriotism. Even in Katanga they still look to their Kasai regions with nostalgia. Of all the tribes in Congo, the Luba-Kasai are the most travelled both within and outside the Congo. The Ba Yuda du Congo singing group paints the Kasai region as “the blessed land subdued with good rain.” The singing group also casts, in the Luba (Kasai) language, the Luba-Kasai as the “bantu ba bulayo”. Which means a people of promise. The extent to which this patriotism leads to anti-Kasai sentiments in Katanga deserves another analysis. However, it is interesting to note that in spite of the Congo’s instability, no Luba-Kasai has taken to arms to rebel against the government in Kinshasa. As such, the peaceful nature of the Kasai shouldn’t be doubted. Interestingly, of all the Congo’s warlords none is a Kasai. In fact, even when they had the numbers and the infrastructure to lead a successful rebellion in Kinshasa, no Luba-Kasai has ever exploited this channel. In the recent elections, the Kasai Ettiene Tshisekedi lost an unfair election to Joseph Kabila, and yet Tshisekedi never agitated for war or violence against Kabila.

The challenge therefore for the Bemba speaking Congolese is to begin changing their attitudes towards their Kasai counterparts. As these attitudes in Katanga change for the better, this will get fed into Zambia as well. The people of Katanga shouldn’t give into the Wa Kumwanza ideology, not now and not ever.

Back to Kaunda’s attitudes towards the Congo, by the time he had realised that he was too ruthless against the Congo it was too late. Zambians had lost faith in him. But in spite of the general negative against the Kasai, Zambians loved the music done by one of the Kasai’s most famous sons – Luambo Makiadi (aka Franco). It was in the waning years of his rule that Kaunda invited Luambo Makiadi to come and visit Zambia so that KK can benefit from Franco’s popularity. For his part, Luambo Makiadi did not disappoint. His dancing queens and princes penned a song for Kaunda in Swahili, asking Zambians to vote for KK. Franco sung, “President Kaunda, papa wa oliya” – the father of peace.

After Kaunda left the presidency, President Frederick Chiluba succeeded him. Chiluba’s sufficient Congolese connections are obvious as testified to by a Mr. Kafupi (and by Mr. William Takere Banda. Mr. Kafupi claimed to have been Chiluba’s father and his resemblance with Chiluba was unusually striking. With this heritage, one would have expected a change in attitude towards the Congo. But Chiluba, in spite of his clear Congolese connections, refused to normalise relations with the Congo. It was still a toxic heritage.

Psychologically then, Chiluba had internalised Kaunda’s aversion for the Congo such that he too started acting like Kaunda. First, Chiluba refused to admit to have ever been to the Congo. Second, he even rejected a Mr. Chabala Kafupi a Zambian of Congolese heritage who claimed to have been his father. Third, in spite of his village being just a few hundred meters from the Luapula River and consequently from the Congolese border, Chiluba refused to have ever seen or grown up in the Congo. Fourthly, Chiluba cleared the few Zambians of Congolese heritage still serving in Kaunda’s government.

Chiluba, however, softened latter in his presidency towards the Congo. Moreover, the fact that he openly embraced current Katanga governor Moise Katumbi and granted him both asylum and a Zambian diplomatic passport goes to show that Chiluba was tired of hiding his Congolese heritage. The choice of Mwanawasa could have also played in this redeemed attitude. Chiluba as president had information about the full heritage of candidate Mwanawasa. He chose to go with it because Congolese heritage should not be despised any more.

In the age of T.P. Mazembe Football Club and in the days of open business between Lubumbashi and Lusaka, attitudes towards the Congo are changing. Zambians of Congolese origin, who had been living in shadows and fear, have started to openly embrace their heritage. Indeed this is good for Zambia and for the identity of perhaps a million of her citizens. It shouldn’t hurt to be a Zambian of Congolese heritage. It has definitely stopped to hurt for a Zambian citizen to openly embrace those family members separated from her simply because King Leopold and Queen Victoria had so decided. Zambians can do nothing about the past, but for the future they are hurriedly affirming: toxic no more.

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Munshya wa Munshya

53 responses to “Toxic Roots: Why Zambians of Congolese Origin Hide their Heritage”

  1. Chrispine Moyo Avatar
    Chrispine Moyo

    Just reading this now. Very interesting.
    The take home for is not that so and so have Congolese roots or otherwise, but it’s a recognition that Zambia boasts of a rich heritage which should acknowledged and nurtured. It’s when the heritage is used by those with influence to disadvantage, malign and ostracize that it becomes counter productive.
    Thanks Munshya for the enlightening write up.

  2. our website

    Toxic Roots: Why Zambians of Congolese Origin Hide their Heritage | Elias Munshya, LL.M, MBA, M.DIV.

  3. Chibale Didier Avatar
    Chibale Didier

    This is very exciting and educative, keep it up Bakwetu

    1. Very good and well reaserched paper ba Wesu. Fwebena Chishinga kuli ba mayo n bena Mukulu kuli ba tata

  4. Always ask my parents how my name came about. Who ever asks me if I’m a Congolese or Zambian,I neither deny nor accept because both of my parents hails from Mpika.

  5. A filling of rejection I feel in my beautiful country Zambia for being Tonga were speaking Tonga in Zambia is almost becoming a case. When you speak Tonga in a public place in Zambia as if you are a murderer a situation which is fueled by the Bemba speaking people. This brings a lot of fear in most of us as my daughter told me of she was despised at school by her non Tonga speaking counterparts which led to her feeling shy to the speak language even when home. Kaunda’s fear of losing power has left a very traumatic scar in many people’s lives who feels if they accepted there Congolese connection they will experience some of rejection. Mr Munshya the feeling of rejection is not a pleasant one. Sometimes I feel very bad when you see a Bemba friend who speaks fluent Tonga when at your place but pretends and speaks broken Tonga in public all in fear of being labelled Tonga. Thanks for education you provided to the many masses and I hope one day with honestinness you write about this situation which is slowly taking root in Zambia because of politics.

    1. Well this is just sad. I am a very proud Tonga who speaks the language whenever I get the chance to. I am entitled to the space I was born in and and command it wherever I go. I will not be intimidated to exist less than because someone was not given sufficient love as an infant, no sir! Now go out there and shine royal one.

  6. honoliverkapamba Avatar
    honoliverkapamba

    This is is what many young lads like me will never learn in School. In my view apart from focusing on the Zambian-Congo DR geo -politics, a lot of African Education History need to be rewritten

  7. And,that’s when am coming across this gotten knowledge from here thank you

  8. Mushiya wa mushiya

  9. kombe Richard musonda Avatar
    kombe Richard musonda

    Wow a serious Paradox !!!

  10. Very interesting forZambian and DRC we are brothers, lets handsone

  11. First class bullshit! This is total gibberish!

  12. The article is a combination of truth and fiction – authors imaginations. It is like reading Brown’s Da Vinci Code. Sounds convincing but he fails to mention one village in Congo were you find bemba speaking Congolese. Congolese speak a language called Lunda not Bemba. The Chitimukulu can confirm that fact..

    1. Thomas Mukanzo Avatar
      Thomas Mukanzo

      No offense but Bemba is spoken in Lubumbashi,and so is Kaonde,Chokwe;Lamba and Kaonde and in fact,Lubumbashi is a Lamba Town under Chief Kaponda a relative of Chietness Musaka.so it’s not bullshit as Chanda called it

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  14. A brilliant analysis about our Congolese connection .Can the author sheds some lights about his own Congolese connection . The way he has narrated things seems to suggest that he has a very strong connection with the DRC congo.

    1. Kishiba Diane:

      Uli wamulomo.

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  16. Really interesting article!!!!

  17. Mwetwa Mweemba Avatar
    Mwetwa Mweemba

    Really good literature Mr Munshya

  18. Thank you for this informative article. I come from a family with strong Congolese roots which were never shied away from so it’s good to get more details about it.

  19. Informative, educational, interesting. It is would be quite interesting to hear a little more about the Easterners of the Luba-Linda descent. How did they escape the stigma? I missed the Malawian article kindly email it to me please.

    Great stuff!

  20. Thank you ba Munshya wesu. You should send this well researched article to Lusaka Times

  21. Thank you wesu for information concerning out roots. Continue to trace our hidden past to embrace one another and ignore the artificial boundaries. Walasa wesu!!
    Pastor Chibamba.

  22. Harrison Musonda Avatar
    Harrison Musonda

    Brilliant.. I look forward to contributing on Zambians of Angola Heritage

  23. Zambia/Congo LAMBA Avatar
    Zambia/Congo LAMBA

    This is one of the stories our young people need to know.Congolese try to extend their hand of friendship but we shun them. KK could have been abad man for sure. We can change history but let us change the future to embrase our brothers.

  24. one of the most interesting and informative reads. Thanks.

  25. Very informative article, especially for young generations who know little or nothing about their origins. I used to enjoy my history lessons and the biggest lesson I got is that history cannot be learned in isolation. We cannot talk about Zambian history at a ceratain time without talking about what happened in neighbouring lands at the taht same time. Events happening in one area will definitely influence other areas as countries are not islands. The same is true when we talk about globalization today. Business slowdown in China is affecting all world economies.
    Bravo to Mr Munshya for this wonderful article, there is more to learn about ourselves, our country, our continent and the world at large. We cannot shape our future from nothing, it is anchored on the past. lessons learned from this past will liberate our thinking, and our attitudes towards one another.

    1. Brilliant analysis, Bro! Another prominent Bemba speaking Congolese leader was the late Augustin Katumba Mwanke who served as Katanga Governor under Laurent Kabila and later as Joseph Kabila closest adviser.
      It doesn’t seem to me that the anti-Kasai attitude that characterizes most people in Katanga including those sharing a common heritage with millions on the Zambian side of the border i.e Tabwas, Ushis, Lalas, Lambas, Kaondes, Chokwes, Lundas, Luvales, Ndembos….) has much to do the nature of Zambians’ traditional xenophobic attitude against their compatriots connected to Katanga. I think the causes are a combination of Kasaian chauvinism and Kaunda’s very well orchestrated manipulations, you so rightly identified, which became major obstacles for Zambians of Congolese to asserting themselves as a people and be fulfilled. Their resulting sense of frustration and insecurity have led to those sad documented examples of outright denial and biographical omissions (FT Chiluba and L Mwanawasa)….which could only further complicate things psychologically for victims of this situation..
      Just a thought…How do you react when you referred to as Nigerian in US? Do you become defensive? Do you get upset? and why does most Americans think all Black Africans are Nigerians?

  26. Very interesting read indeed. I have one question. The Bemba spoken in DRC uses the “ki” instead of “chi” similar to Lunda and Kaonde. Did the Zambian Bembas adopt the “chi” from the Ngonis or other tribes they integrated with?

    I was quite surprised the first time I crossed into DRC at Milenge and discovered that there were Lambas across the Luapula river. Zambia has more in common with Katanga than we had been made to believe growing up.

  27. victor nyambe mukungu Avatar
    victor nyambe mukungu

    Powerful and well researched article. I just enjoy reading your blogs Elias. Its a pity that as African brothers and sisters,we allowed the imaginary and divisive borders drawn by the colonialists to break blood ties and look at our own as enemies just because they found themselves on the other side of the line during the demarcation.

    I must confess that I’ve learned more from this article,especially about Kaunda and the damage he caused over the Congo DR-Zambia relations.

    And its like Kaunda specialized in ‘academic load shading’ to hide certain truths from the people. He did it with the Barotseland agreement 1964,the issue is crookedly concealed from elementary caricullum. May God bless the people of Zambia and the Congo as they detoxify their relations and be at once proud of their roots.

  28. Good article indeed

  29. wonderful

  30. Good article. I’m going through many of these issues as well..

  31. Patrick Mfula Avatar
    Patrick Mfula

    Very interesting information

  32. Wow I love zambian history and I feel a lot has been deliberately left out … I guess its about time we learntthe truth coz im seriously tired of lies

    1. Bweleka Kasonso Avatar
      Bweleka Kasonso

      Informative, Educational, Entertaining, Scholarly, Eye opening and definitely well written. Bravo to you Sir!!!

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    1. Bouhdan M'Bembo Avatar
      Bouhdan M’Bembo

      An excellent, well researched paper from which I have learned a great deal on Congo’s bashing by Zambian past and recent governments. The Kasai labeling of all Congolese and the charge that late Chiluba spoke Lingala made me laugh. Thumbs up and hats off to Mr. Munshya.
      Bouhdan M’Bembo, B.Sc., M.A.
      Congolese, Toronto-CANADA

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  39. Well researched report.I found it very interesting to read!

  40. Well researched article! Mwanawasa was a cousin of Lunda Bululu Vincent de Paul the former prime minister of Zaire and the mother od Mwanawasa used to stay in Sakania at Lunda Bululu father’s house who was his big brother, when Mwanawasa as youngster got burnt, he was taken into Sakania Hospital to be treated and be near his mother-whom he loved very much- who too, was living Sakania., With the help of catholic missionaries as the Father of Lunda BULULU was teaching Catechism at the church mission,Mwanawasa was taken to Leopoldville(Kinshasa) General hospital for further treatments.,alongside with his mother who was recommended to one of her cousin Paul Mulubwa who was working in the public service there! Most of Mwanawasa primary and secondary school holidays were spent in Sakania . Lunda and Mwanawasa used to visit each other a lot. especially when Lunda was working in Libreville-Gabon as Secretary General of a Pan regional organisation of central Africa. prior to be appointed as prime Minister.of Zaire.The relationship went tepid when Mwanawasa started prosecuting Chiluba, act that Lunda Bululu took as Ingratitude and treason. Nevertheless Lunda Bululu with his wife and some members of the Congo family attended Mwanawasa funerals. at Heroes acres they were almost incognito save for few of us who shook hand with them and kept quiet! When Mwanawasa started to exercise his profession of a lawyer mostly in Ndola,notorious Congolese smugglers and most of Congolese of Copper belt province were using him in court cases as words went among Congolese that He was of one of them. All complaints from Congolese(Zairian)clients who could not speak Bemba or English,were handled by himself as he was fluent in swahili of Katanga ,thereafter He will dictate the interview to his secretary in english for court use, Congolese were aware that kaunda was always uneasy within his presence! I took several letters of him to his Congolese family and to my amazement one of his young cousin Longwa was my school play mate at my primary school in Rwashi- ;Lubumbashi! I used him for more than 5 times in lusaka courts for some commercial disputes, on recesses of courts we use to kill time in Ridge ways Hotel and mostly taking about Congo!
    TO BE CONTINUED

    1. Lovely now I understand

  41. Another top read from you. I wish you could add to this equation 2 other notions and qualify or dismiss theml
    1. Congolese as crooked and otherwise untrust worthy. Zambian traders prefer to be paid in Kitwe or at the border because “Ba Kasai” will not pay you if they get to DRC
    2. Ba Kasai bonse ba bwanga, tread carefully.

  42. ths ze a vry interstn article n hv enjoyd readn it…

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