Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Léon Kengo

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Succeeded by
  
Position abolished

Succeeded by
  
Etienne Tshisekedi

Preceded by
  
Sambwa Pida Nbagui

Name
  
Leon Kengo

Succeeded by
  
Role
  
Political figure

Preceded by
  
Faustin Birindwa



Preceded by
  
N\'singa Udjuu Ongwabeki Untubu

Education
  
Universite libre de Bruxelles

Exclusivite la chutte rat e du pr sident du senat congolais l on kengo wa dondo


Léon Kengo Wa Dondo (born Leon Lubicz; 22 May 1935) served as the "first state commissioner" (a title equivalent to prime minister) several times under Mobutu Sese Seko in Zaïre. He was one of the most powerful figures in the regime and was a strong advocate of economic globalization and free-market economics. Since 2007, he has been President of the Senate of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Besides he is related to the family of the deputy-minister of planning Franck Mwe di Malila due to the marriage of his daughter.

Contents

Léon Kengo PBL vox Biographie de Kengo wa Dondo

Exclusivit messe de 80 ans de l on kengo wa dondo pr sident du senat de la rdc


Origins

Kengo was born in Libenge, Équateur province, Belgian Congo (later Zaire and now Democratic Republic of Congo). He was the son of a Polish Jewish father and a Rwandan Tutsi mother. He changed his name to Kengo Wa Dondo in 1971 during Mobutu's Africanization campaign.

Prime Minister of Mobutu

Kengo served as Prime Minister for the first time from 1982 to 1986, appointing able technocrats to important positions, such as Munga Mibindo, President Delegate General of the National Electrical Utility (SNEL). He then served as foreign minister from 1986 to 1987 and as Prime Minister again from 1988 to 1990. During the early 1990s Mobutu allowed a transitional parliament to be set up, and Kengo was chosen Prime Minister by it in 1994 as a candidate in an attempt to neutralise the challenge from the country's then most popular politician, Étienne Tshisekedi. He expelled members of the Lebanese community from Zaire for alleged involvement in the illegal trade of conflict diamonds, though the credibility of such actions is perhaps challenged by the fact that trade in conflict diamonds from Angola had long been essential to the survival of the Mobutu regime, in which Kengo had been such an important figure.

Léon Kengo RDC le prsident du Snat Kengo Wa Dondo s39inquite d39un

Shortly after the beginning of the Congo civil war, in December 1996, Kengo became the leader of a crisis cabinet which sought to defeat the rebellion of Laurent Kabila. He was undermined by many Mobutu supporters because of his Tutsi origins, as Kabila's rebels were allied with the Tutsi governments of Rwanda and Burundi. As Kabila's armies advanced through the country, Kengo was also criticized for not conducting the war very well. He announced his resignation in March 1997 and left office in April 1997. The Mobutu government fell a month later, and Kengo retired from politics. In 2003, he was charged with money laundering in Belgium.

President of the Senate of Congo

Léon Kengo httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Following his return to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kengo backed Jean-Pierre Bemba in the 2006 presidential election; Bemba was defeated by President Joseph Kabila in the second round of the election. Kengo was then elected as a Senator from Équateur province in January 2007. On 11 May 2007, Kengo was somewhat unexpectedly elected as President of the Senate, defeating Léonard She Okitundu, the candidate of the majority coalition, the Alliance of the Presidential Majority. Kengo, who was an independent candidate, took 55 votes against 49 for Okitundu. On 21 January 2015 during the 2015 Congolese protests he met with American, Belgian, British, and French diplomats who urged him to either suspend debate and voting on the election modifying law or to remove its controversial provisions.

Léon Kengo Leon Kengo Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Léon Kengo Senate Chief Hospitalized in Paris After Attack Congo Planet

References

Léon Kengo Wikipedia