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Bernardin Mungul Diaka

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Bernardin Mungul Diaka (Kirondo (Bandundu), 12 November 1933 – Kinshasa, 3 June 1999)[1][2][3] was a Congolese/Zairean diplomat and politician.

He started his career as the director of Minister of Defence Patrice Lumumba in 1960. After the Dissolution of the Lumumba Government by President Joseph Kasavubu, Lumumbist forces fled to Stanleyville (nowadays Kisangani) to found a rival government to the central government. This Stanleyville government was headed by Antoine Gizenga, who would send Mungul Diaka as his representative in the People's Republic of China.[4] After the arrest of Gizenga, Mungul Diaka became the head of the Parti Solidaire Africain in February 1962. As an elected government member of the government of Kwilu Province, he was the Minister of Planning, but lost his position after a vote of no confidence and later became a deputy for Kwilu in 1965.[5]

After the second coup d'état of Mobutu in 1965, new President Joseph-Désiré Mobutu appoint him the country's resident Minister to Belgium and the European Economic Community in 1967.[6] He held several important executive functions throughout the years, including Minister of National Education, member of the executive committee of the Movement Populaire de la Révolution, and Minister of Higher Education, until he was revoked and imprisoned. He chose to go into exile to Belgium in 1980, where he stayed until 1985.[7] Mungul Diaka was the Prime Minister of Zaire from 1 November 1991 to 25 November 1991. He was appointed by Mobutu Sese Seko and considered a moderate.[8] He was also a governor of Kinshasa from 1992 to 1996.

Mungul Diaka was married to Nelly Kamashi Mungul Diaka Lumana (1946–2022), importer of Dutch wax fabric.[9]

References

  1. ^ Fritscher, Frédéric (8 June 1999). "Bernardin Mungul Diaka; Directeur du cabinet de Lumumba, premier ministre de Mobutu". Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Translations on Sub-Saharan Africa". 1967.
  3. ^ allafrica.com, 4 June 1999, Congo-Kinshasa: Former Congolese Prime Minister Diaka Dead
  4. ^ Verhaegen, Benoît. Congo 1961. Brussels: Centre de recherche et d'information socio-politiques (CRISP). p. 186.
  5. ^ Fritscher, Frédéric (8 June 1999). "Bernardin Mungul Diaka; Directeur du cabinet de Lumumba, premier ministre de Mobutu". Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  6. ^ "67/79/CEE". Official Journal of the European Communities (in French): 241. 27 January 1967. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  7. ^ Fritscher, Frédéric (8 June 1999). "Bernardin Mungul Diaka; Directeur du cabinet de Lumumba, premier ministre de Mobutu". Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  8. ^ The New York Times, 26 November 1991, ANOTHER PREMIER REPLACED IN ZAIRE
  9. ^ "Last tributes of President Félix Tshisekedi to the late widow Mungul Diaka". 2022-10-02.
Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Congo-Kinshasa
1991
Succeeded by