Lumumba, Patrice Emergy
Shortly after independence, the army mutinied, the Belgian government flew in troops to protect Belgian citizens, and Katanga province declared its independence. A coup in September, covertly aided by the UN, overthrew Lumumba's government. President Kasavubu, Lumumba's rival for power, dismissed him as prime minister and he, in turn, dismissed Kasavubu as president. Shortly afterward, Lumumba was put under house arrest by Colonel Mobutu. Lumumba escaped but was recaptured and then flown, on orders from Mobutu and Kasavubu, to Katanga. On January 17 1961, armed men drove Lumumba to a concealed area of the Katanga bush, shot him, and buried him in a hurriedly dug grave. In February it was announced that he had been killed. Riots of protest took place in many parts of the world. Lumumba's murder is considered, by some historians, to be one of the defining events in postcolonial African history. He was Africa's first democratically elected leader and his rule lasted less than three months. Lumumba became an symbol for anti-imperialist activists.
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