Mosambaye Singa Boyenge
General Mosambaye Singa Boyenge, born Alexandre Singa Boyenge on October 10, 1932 in Eastern Province (Democratic Republic of Congo) and died on July 21, 2001 in Kinshasa, was a Congolese soldier and statesman.
Career
He became a lieutenant in 1960, at the independence of the former Belgian Congo, and rose to the rank of army general in January 1980.
After the fighting of the secession of Katanga in 1963, those against the rebellion of the troops of the East a year later, the confrontation in Kivu and in the Eastern province of Jean Schrame and the war of "80 days" where it succeeds to repel the invaders from Zairian territory, he was appointed military governor of Shaba (present-day Katanga) at the end of the so-called "6-day" battle in 1978.[1]
General Singa Boyenge also held political office in the Popular Movement of the Revolution (MPR). In the diplomatic field, he was also a military attache at the Zaire embassy in Rome in 1969, and ambassador of Zaire in Uganda in 1970.[2]
On June 11, 1975, as chief of the gendarmerie at that time, he led a revolutionary commission to investigate the coup d'état against the government (now known as "The coup d'etat monté et manqué"). This commission arrested several army officers, accused of conspiracy against Mobutu (attempted assassination), high treason and disclosure of military secrets.[3][4]
References
- Official Journal of Zaire, Ordonnance no.79-010 du 18 janvier 1979 portant nomination d'un Commandant de la premiere region militaire, No. 3. Kinshasa. 1979.
- "Décès d'un ancien général des Forces armées zaïroises". Panapress. July 25, 2001.
- WONDO OMANYUNDU, Jean-Jacques. DE LA FORCE PUBLIQUE AUX FARDC : ANATOMIE D'UNE ARMEE VIRTUELLE INTRAVERTIE ET PERVERTIE, p. IIIème PARTIE. pp. 3–4.
- Schatzberg, Michael (1988). The Dialetics of Oppression in Zaire, Indiana University Press. Indiana, United States of America. p. 108.