Six famous people you didn’t know are from the Democratic Republic of the Congo

Francis Akhalbey June 30, 2021
To commemorate DRC's independence day, Face2Face Africa shares with you 6 famous people you didn’t know are from the central African country -- Photo Credit: Getty Images

Straddling the Equator, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is the second-largest country in Africa. The mighty Congo River flows north and then south through a land rich in minerals, fertile farmlands, and rain forests. The country has a tiny coast on the Atlantic Ocean, just enough to accommodate the mouth of the Congo River. And the forested Congo River basin occupies 60 percent of the nation’s area.

On June 30, 1960, the Belgian Congo became independent as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Gen. Joseph Mobutu came to power in a coup in 1965; he changed his name to Mobutu Sese Seko and the country’s name to the Republic of Zaire. Mobutu’s corruption-ridden government continued in power until 1997 when rebel forces led by Laurent Kabila—supported by Rwanda and Uganda—took Kinshasa and changed the country’s name back to the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

A rift between Kabila and his former allies caused a new rebellion in 1998, backed by Rwanda and Uganda. What became known as “Africa’s world war” started as Zimbabwe, Angola, Namibia, and Chad sent troops to support Kabila. The war claimed some three million lives, with all sides plundering the country’s natural resources—especially diamonds from south-central Congo. A UN-supported peace agreement in 2002 and the formation of a transitional government in 2003 brought an end to the five-year conflict.

To commemorate Congo-Kinshasa’s independence day, Face2Face Africa shares with you six people you didn’t know are from the central African nation:

Last Edited by:Mildred Europa Taylor Updated: June 30, 2021

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