Abstract

Abstract Since the end of the 2006 post-war transition, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and the international community have struggled to design, finance and implement a host of national and regional disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR) programmes. The weak capacity of implementing institutions, widespread corruption, funding gaps, Western-driven processes and a misdiagnosis of local needs have all been raised as core reasons behind failures. Little is known about how processes of ex-combatant return shape and reshape public authority, where former combatants return to, how they negotiate and experience ‘return’ and how viable ways of life are successfully constituted post return. While many ex-combatants in the DRC continue to be re-recruited into militia groups, one group that has reintegrated successfully is the Toleka—a several-thousand-strong group of ex-combatants who returned (or remained) in the provincial capital of Mbandaka (Equateur province). The Toleka formed a bicycle-taxi organization and unionized its membership, providing protections and collective-bargaining authority to the group, while providing a public good. It also helped to reshape identities, produce a sense of civilian solidarity and provide a bridging function from life in the military. This article looks at how this organization was formed, how the former fighters identified and capitalized on a local need and the conditions that allowed them to successfully unionize and protect their rights as they re-entered civilian life. Based on extensive fieldwork and interviews, this article seeks to understand a case of ‘successful’ return in a region with few such successes.

Highlights

  • Every day in towns outside of the megacity of Kinshasa, thousands of young men on colourful bicycles can be seen riding around town, transporting passengers, livestock and burlap sacks of foodstuffs strapped on the back of their bicycles

  • During the second Congo war (1998–2003), the province was divided between the Mouvement pour la Liberation du Congo (MLC) rebel group in the north and Kabila’s government forces, which occupied Mbandaka, in the south

  • The one thing that unites many of them is a collective rejection of an ex-combatant identity, a return to civilian life in Mbandaka and membership in another group—a bicycle transportation syndicate called the Toleka Bicycle Taxi Union

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Summary

Tatiana Carayannis and Aaron Pangburn

Ces ex-combattants, ce sont des eternels insatisfaits (‘‘These ex-combatants, they are the eternally unsatisfied’’, authors’ interview with the president of Les Aiglons, an implementing non-governmental organization (NGO) of DDR programmes in the DRC, Gemena, February 2015)

Introduction
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