Joseph Kabila

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Joseph Kabila Kanambe
Joseph Kabila

Incumbent
Assumed office 
26 January 2001
Prime Minister Antoine Gizenga
Preceded by Laurent-Désiré Kabila

Born 04 June 1971 (1971-06-04) (age 36)
Fizi, Congo-Kinshasa
Political party PPRD
Spouse Olive Lembe di Sita
Religion Church of Christ in Congo

Joseph Kabila Kabange (born June 4, 1971), known commonly as Joseph Kabila, became president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo ten days after the murder of his father, in January 2001. On November 27, 2006, he was confirmed as the first Congolese President to be democratically elected by universal direct suffrage.

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Joseph Kabila was born in a small town Hewa Bora, in the arusha territory of the South Kivu province, in the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. He is the son of former rebel leader and DRC president Laurent-Désiré Kabila and Sifa Mahanya.

Kabila started elementary school in the public school system, in Fizi, South Kivu, and finished in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. He then went on to attend secondary school in Mbeya, Tanzania.

Following high school, Joseph Kabila followed a military training in Tanzania, then at Makerere training center in Uganda, and finally in the RPF military in Rwanda before his father called him to join the rebellion. In 1996, he joined his father's Rwandan backed rebel forces (the Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo, (AFDL)), as operations commander, in the campaign that is dubbed the First Congo War. Following the AFDL's victory, and Laurent Kabila's rise to the presidency, Joseph Kabila went on to get further training at the National training center, in Beijing, China.

When he returned from China, Kabila was given the rank of Major-General, and appointed Deputy-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Congolese Armed Forces, in 1998. He was later, in 2000, appointed Army Chief of Staff, a position he held until the elder President Kabila's assassination in January 2001. As chief of staff, he was potrayed as one of the main military leaders in charge of Government troops in the troublesome Congo.

Kabila rose to the Presidency on 26 January 2001 after the assassination of his father. At age 29, he was considered young and inexperienced. Joseph Kabila subsequently attempted to end the ongoing civil war and remove foreign troops from the country, with some success. The 2002 peace agreement signed at the Inter-Congolese Dialogue in Sun City, South Africa, which nominally ended the Second Congo War, maintained Joseph Kabila as President and head of state of the Congo. An interim administration was set up under him, including the leaders of the country's two main rebel groups as vice-presidents (two other vice-presidents are representatives of the civilian opposition and government supporters respectively).

On March 28, 2004, an apparent coup attempt or mutiny around the capital Kinshasa, allegedly on the part of members of the former guard of president Mobutu Sese Seko (who was ousted by Kabila's father in 1997 and died in the same year), failed.[1] On June 11, 2004, coup plotters led by Major Eric Lenge allegedly attempted to take power and announced on state radio that the transitional government was suspended, but were defeated by loyalist troops.[2][3]

In December 2005, a referendum approved a new constitution, and a presidential election was held on July 30, 2006 (having been delayed from an earlier date in June).[4] The new constitution lowers the minimum age of presidential candidates from 35 to 30; Kabila turned 35 shortly before the election. In March 2006, he registered as a candidate.[5]

According to provisional results announced on August 20, Kabila won 45% of the vote; his main opponent, vice-president and former rebel leader Jean-Pierre Bemba, won 20%. Kabila fared better in the eastern part of the country, where Swahili is spoken.[6] A run-off vote between Kabila and Bemba was held on October 29. On November 15, the electoral commission announced the official results and Kabila was declared the winner, with 58.05% of the vote.[7]. These results were confirmed by the Supreme Court on November 27, 2006, and Kabila was inaugurated on December 6, 2006 as the country's newly elected President.[8] He named Antoine Gizenga, who placed third in the first round of the presidential election (and then backed Kabila in the second round) as prime minister on December 30.[9]

Although Kabila registered as an independent, he is the "initiator" of the People's Party for Reconstruction and Democracy (PPRD), which chose him as their candidate to the election.

In response to accusations that sex crimes had been committed by the Congolese military, he pointed out that 300 soldiers have been convicted of sex crimes, although he admitted that is not enough.[10]

President Kabila, and his bride Ms. Olive Lembe at their civil wedding ceremony
President Kabila, and his bride Ms. Olive Lembe at their civil wedding ceremony

On June 1, 2006, after many wedding rumors were fueled by many in top positions in the country, the head of the Presidential Household, Ambassador Theodore Mugalu officially announced the wedding of the President to Ms. Olive Lembe di Sita. The wedding ceremonies took place on June 17, 2006. [1] Mr. Kabila and his spouse have a daughter, born in 2001, named Sifa after Kabila's mother.

As President Kabila is Protestant, and Ms. Lembe di Sita is Catholic, the wedding ceremonies were ecumenical, and were therefore officiated by both the Catholic Archbishop of Kinshasa, Cardinal Frederic Etsou Bamungwabi, and Mgr Pierre Marini Bodho - Bishop and President of the Church of Christ in Congo, the umbrella church for most Protestant denominations in the Congo, known within the country simply as "The Protestant Church".

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Preceded by
Laurent-Désiré Kabila
President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
2001–
Succeeded by
Incumbent


Persondata
NAME Kabila, Joseph
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Kabila Kabange, Joseph (full name)
SHORT DESCRIPTION president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
DATE OF BIRTH June 4, 1971
PLACE OF BIRTH Hewa Bora II, South Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo
DATE OF DEATH living
PLACE OF DEATH
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