Ange Diawara Explained

Ange Diawara
Order1:Vice President of the Council of National Revolution
Nationality:Congolese
Term Start1:Sept 1968
Term End1:Jan 1969
President1:Marien Ngouabi
Predecessor1:Jacques Opangault
Successor1:Himself as First Vice President
Term Start2:Jan 1969
Term End2:March 1969
Predecessor2:Himself
Successor2:Alfred Raoul
Birth Date:1941
Birth Place:Sibiti, French Congo
Death Date:April 1973
Death Place:People's Republic of the Congo
Death Cause:Execution
Party:Congolese Party of Labour
Profession:Politician, Militar
Spouse:Adélaïde Mougany

Ange Diawara (1941  - April 1973) was a politician and military figure from the Republic of the Congo.[1]

The son of a chief, Diawara was born in Sibiti to a Congolese mother and a Congolese father with Malian origins. He received higher education in Cuba and the Soviet Union.[2] When the National Revolutionary Council (CNR) was established in August 1968, Diawara became the First Vice-President of the CNR Executive Board in charge of Defense and Security; he was subsequently a founding member of the Congolese Party of Labour (PCT) in December 1969 and became Secretary of the CNR Executive Board in charge of Defense and Security. He was included on the PCT Political Bureau, formed on December 31, 1969, as First Political Commissar to the Army,[1] and was a government minister. He was the Minister of Equipment, Agriculture, Water Affairs, and Forestry, and on June 13, 1971, he was additionally assigned the Development portfolio.[3]

When the PCT Political Bureau was reduced to five members in December 1971, Diawara remained a member of the Political Bureau and was placed in charge of the Permanent Commission of the Army.[1] Diawara led a failed coup d'état against President Ngouabi in February 1972. Fleeing Brazzaville, Diawara and the other conspirators were eventually captured and killed in April 1973.

Diawara was married to Adélaïde Mougany.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Rémy Bazenguissa-Ganga, Les voies du politique au Congo: essai de sociologie historique (1997), Karthala Editions, pages 145, 149, 193, and 429.
  2. Book: A. Wiseman, John . 1991 . Political leaders in Black Africa: a biographical dictionary of the major politicians since independence . E. Elgar. 60 . 978-1-852-78047-0 .
  3. "Jul 1971 - Reorganization of Council of State. - Communist Chinese Aid. - Alleged Anti-Government Plots", Keesing's Record of World Events, Volume 17, July, 1971 Congo, page 24,724.
  4. Cheikh Yérim Seck, "Yvonne Adélaïde Moundélé-Ngollo", Jeune Afrique, 7 September 2003 .