Saturday, 16 March 2019

Freedom ripples

The outrage when that Tshisekedi was proclaimed the victor in Congo’s election  was nearly universal:: there was convincing evidence that Fayulu had about 60% of the votes. What’s more Tshisekedi – lets call him Felix to make it easier – had no, literally no, experience.

But as the dust settled, the fact that a peaceful transfer of power had taken place, even if it wasn’t to the right person, was a truly remarkable fact. The first time EVER in the history of the Congo.

We didn’t expect much, but were very encouraged when he announced that political prisoners would be released. And then he announced a crack down on corruption, this, he made clear, was a new regime. The corrupt would be arrested.

Before long, stories of the massive scams perpetrated against the state were allowed to circulate without the journalists being arrested. The heads of the electricity company and the port authority were just the first of a long line to be arrested with maximum publicity.

Felix said something else: workers would, from now on, get paid. The days when the salaries of government and state utility workers would be paid months and months late were over.

That was music to the ears of a great many people. But when nothing happened – by which I mean that they still weren’t paid – they went on strike. That wasn’t what Felix had in mind. All the same, strikers were treated with respect, unlike previously when they would have been threatened and tear gassed by riot police.

What no one could have predicted is that the workers in the shops trading in fabrics and household equipment in the famous the Avenue de Commerce would have the same idea. Stories about bad treatment by mainly Lebanese and Indian owners abound – pay of only a few dollars a day, no allowances for leave or transport, etc – so they really do they have a strong case. And they felt sufficiently powerful, and sufficiently brave knowing that Felix would support their cause, to close down a whole street.

My guess is that they’ll all be sacked, but these days methinks they will have the labour department behind them which can enforce, when not bribed to do otherwise, some pretty hard deals. My employer sacked someone one day after the expiry of his probationary period and was forced to pay a whole year’s salary in compensation.


So, Felix, welcome. Keep it up!

Friday, 1 February 2019

Games people play

Social circles in Kinshasa have a strange feeling of unreality – at least the ones that we belong to. There’s such a sense of passing through, that no one has any real connection to the town they’re living in. Talk is more about how one is managing, how long we are there, and how long we will be staying. There are two distinct groups: the diplomats, who drive around in cars with special number plates and exude an air of casual superiority. And there are the aid workers.

Both sides have their pecking order. For the diplomats, Belgium is (or used to be – now it is in the dog house because it imposed sanctions on Kabila and his cronies) up at the top because of its historical connections. Alongside Belgium there are the obvious ones, the Unites States, Britain and Germany, the big aid-givers who have large staff and are deeply involved. There are so many staff in these embassies that they tend to hand together but occasionally you meet them. Lower in the pecking order are, obviously, India, Greece, Turkey, Brazil and the multiple UN agencies. They’re much more approachable and you bump into them quite often. Indeed, we were at lunch one day (see earlier episode) with the ambassadors of India, Brazil and Switzerland.

And then there are the real –  as they would see it – aid workers, the Red Cross, Save the Children, CARE, Oxfam and, of course, Médecins sans Frontières. They have the uniform of the egalitarian: jeans and t-shirts; beards on the men and long lanky hair on the women. Sandals are the footwear of choice. They have a weary reluctance to talk about their work, like soldiers coming from a terrible battle. What they will talk about is trips they’ve made which we weakling mortals would find dangerous or simply too difficult, like going up the river to Kisangani in a local boat, a two week epic of chaos and vibrant life; taking the train to the port of Matadi, or exploring ancient religious sites near Kinshasa. But once in Kinshasa, they are going to have fun. They keep the nightclubs going and are happy to burn the candle at both ends while they can.

But I’ve forgotten to mention the old-timers. There’s a small band of people who came in the days of Mobutu and who have never left. They’ve been through the terrible and dangerous times of the pillages, when the troops, and later the ordinary people, took it upon themselves to steal everything. With Mobutu’s connivance they ruined every single factory and expatriate home, not just stealing but also smashing everything that couldn’t be removed. This happened not once but twice and the tales of terror that people experienced are truly chilling. But they stayed, and now they are reaping the rewards. Kinshasa is back to working more or less like a normal city, and the economy still needs supplies. So, for those with the ability to manage the system (read bribe the right people for survival) the pickings are rich.  Their stories are fascinating, but what is most striking is that they don’t see anything particularly unusual, let alone heroic, in their experiences.

It’s only their nouveau-riche talk that sometimes gets nauseating. Private jets, apartments in Paris and New York, children at Swiss schools, etc etc. But, to be fair, most still see themselves as ordinary, and don’t use their wealth as a social tool.

But money creates enmity, and from time to time the Government (read President) decides to take down someone. The speed at which this can be done is terrifying. Banks are closed at a day’s notice; assets are frozen, people are jailed. A process that could take years in most countries is achieved in days. This was a trick that (now ex-president) Kabila learned from Mobutu.

The most feared people are the tax collectors. They have sweeping powers, and they are not afraid of using them. Neither side has any illusion about the game that they play. It is to intimidate the tax payer by cooking up a massive demand, and then inviting a compromise that will include a relatively small sum paid to the tax office and a relatively large one paid to the tax collector him- or herself. To avoid regular confrontations, businesses typically cultivate a symbiotic relationship with the tax collectors in which the bribe and official components are matters of routine that do not need to be negotiated.

This puts businesses that are under international scrutiny, and cannot pay bribes, in a bind. The tax collectors see this intransigence as a front to avoid paying anything, so the tax bill is inflated by way of revenge. If they don’t pay, their bank accounts can be frozen at the stroke of a pen. That happens: the managing director of a new mine near Lubumbashi told me that the tax collector had produced a tax demand based on the amount of his investment, not profit. Obviously, since there had been no income there was no tax to pay, but the tax collector was adamant and closed the bank account without any notice, because he couldn’t (or didn’t want to) understand that the mine was still in the development phase and had not started production. The mine was forced to close down until the situation could be resolved. His case was the worst I have heard.


Back to happier things. Yes Kinshasa is an island in which we are forced by circumstances to meet many people that we would not normally expect to call friends. And yes, it is both interesting and, at times, fun.

Sunday, 27 January 2019

Whew!

It’s been a hectic six weeks, starting with the mass evacuation of all British and American citizens (which is only now being ended); the election being postponed and eventually held in what can only be described as rickety form; the announcement of results that everyone knew were cooked, and finally the acceptance that it was better to accept cooked results than start fighting again.

Because although the Catholic church had monitored the ballot carefully and made a public statement to the effect that their results were very different from the so-called official ones, and a whistle-blower had leaked results from the electoral commission that substantiated their claim, it was still remarkable that there would be a peaceful transfer of power to an opposition party. Rumours of a back-door deal between the outgoing and incoming presidents to protect the interests of the previously ruling party were not enough to spoil the feeling: we’ve made it! We’ve got a new government without a coup!

As inauguration day approached worries about the ability of the new President to govern were pushed away, and a massive sense of relief swept through Kinshasa. Think of all the bad things of the last decade – maybe they’ll end. Particularly the vicious oppression of all dissent. And, sure enough, one of the few promises made in the inauguration speech was that all political prisoners would be released.


On the day after the inauguration the previously half empty streets of Kinshasa were suddenly full again. It’s not normal to welcome traffic jams, but they were a small price to pay for a return to normalcy. Car parking around our favourite lunch-spot was totally full. Everywhere, people were celebrating. Overnight it had become bad form to criticize the result: instead one should celebrate what is, without doubt, real change. As if to underline this, another rumour spread like wildfire: “The police have stopped demanding bribes”