
DRC: Is ex-President Joseph Kabila's return a game changer? – DW – 05/27/2025
The Congo River Alliance (AFC) and M23 rebel groups claim Joseph Kabila is in Goma, beyond the reach of Congolese government forces. Kabila, who served as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) head of state from 2001 to 2019, was once a strong ally of incumbent President Felix Tshisekedi.
Kabila recently made headlines after publicly criticizing a decision by Tshisekedi's government to remove his immunity from prosecution, despite being declared a 'senator for life' when he stood down in 2019. Tshisekedi's administration has also ramped up verbal attacks on the former president, with Augustin Kabuya, Secretary-General of Tshisekedi's Union for Democracy and Social Progress (UDPS), declaring "Kabila is not Congolese" but rather a "Rwandan subject."
Some political observers say Kabila's re-emergence in a rebel-held area could jeopardize existing mediation efforts spearheaded by religious leaders.
However, Élodie Ntamuzinda, a conflict resolution expert, told DW that sidelining Kabila is counterproductive: "We encourage the authorities to be able to approach him and that he too be open to talks. We believe that the general interest comes first, and we need each other," Ntamuzinda said.
Joseph Kabila became the Congolese president after the assassination of his father, Laurent-Désiré Kabila (pictured), in 2001 Image: picture-alliance/AP/D. Guttenfelder
Tresor Kibangula, political director at the Kinshasa-based Ebuteli research institute, described former President Joseph Kabila as a shadow power the government is trying to keep at bay.
As the son of the late Congolese President Laurent Desire Kabila, who opposed the dictatorship of Mobutu Sese Seko, Joseph Kabila spent much of his youth in Tanzania before becoming a military leader in his father's rebel Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo-Zaire (AFDL) in the late 1990s.
It is widely believed that Kabila's ADFL rebel group included 'kadogos' (Kiswahili for child soldiers), and when the ADFL ousted Mobutu's regime in 1997, the young Joseph Kabila gained further military training abroad before taking up a senior position in the Congolese Armed Forces (FARDC).
Kabila's tumultuous presidency
Laurent Kabila's assassination on January 16, 2001, thrust his son Joseph Kabila, who was just 29 years old at that time, into the presidency. He was reportedly reluctant to be president of the vast mineral-rich country, which was in the midst of the devastating Second Congo War. The conflict broadly pitted pro-government forces and international allies like Angola, Zimbabwe, and Namibia against Rwandan-backed fighters, who had taken over large territories in the eastern DRC.
The 2002 Sun City Agreement technically ended the fighting and paved the way for the DRC's first democratic election.
Kabila won the 2006 election and would lead the Congo until 2018. He tried to keep a stable government, but accusations of incompetence, cronyism, and corruption dogged his tenure. Despite relative successes like opening up the country to foreign investors and growing the economy, most Congolese remained below the poverty line. At the same time, the nation's mineral wealth was extracted and shipped out of the country to benefit trade partners.
Re-election in 2011 saw Kabila retain power, but his list of enemies grew, and rebel groups such as the Rwandan-backed M23reappeared. Protests against Kabila's governance and self-enrichment rumors were often violently quashed. When Kabila's term ran out in 2016, he delayed the elections until 2018 and became more unpopular at home and abroad.
In addition, the security situation in the DRC, despite the presence of multinational forces like SADC and MONUSCO, was becoming untenable.
Congo: Land of riches beset by massive exploitation
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In 2019, Kabila handed over power peacefully to Felix Tshisekedi, although observers expressed distrust in the validity of the election results. Kabila then seemed to retreat from politics.
But in 2020, the pair fell out, and the coalition between their political parties ended. Since 2023, Tshisekedi's regime has accused Kabila of siding with the M23. Consequently, Tshisekedi banned Kabila's People's Party for Reconstruction and Democracy (PPRD), and ended his immunity from prosecution, which he had enjoyed as a former president.
Is Kabila's influence waning?
Kabila's relationship with the Congolese government deteriorated further in 2025. "There is no strong popular nostalgia for Kabila in the country today," political analyst Tresor Kibangula told DW. Nevertheless, President Tshisekedi has ramped up accusations, saying Kabila was plotting an "insurrection" with the M23. He has regularly named him the architect of the M23's military success in the eastern DRC.
Once allies-turned enemies: Kabila and Tshisekedi during happier times at the 2019 power handover Image: Jerome Delay/dpa/picture alliance
In a recent online video address, 53-year-old Kabila broke his silence publicly for the first time after losing his immunity.
"The dictatorship must end, and democracy and good economic and social governance must be restored."
He criticized Tshisekedi's leadership for corruption, undermining democracy, and mishandling the violent conflict in the eastern DRC.
Déo Bizibu, a member of Tshisekedi's ruling UDPS, accused Kabila of hypocrisy. "This is a pyromaniac trying to pass himself off as a fireman," Bizibu told DW, adding that Kabila had spent six years pulling strings, seeking to return to power.
"He should understand that his time is up."
Why Congo's Tshisekedi wants peace talks with M23 rebels
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Conflict analyst Philippe Doudou Kaganda told DW that Congolese unity is at stake with Kabila's return. "We're going to get bogged down in conflict again, and it's going to take on a dimension that's much more internal than external," he said. "There's a risk that the discourse around Rwanda will be stifled."
Tshisekedi's government has sought to blame incursions from Rwanda as the cause of instability in the eastern DRC. Rwanda denies the allegations and argues that the Congolese must handle their security challenges.
Edited by: Chrispin Mwakideu
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