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Part 1: Politicians in Panic as Ex-Presidents Joseph Kabila and Eduardo dos Santos Fall

In Kinshasa, legal observers and civil society hailed the judgment as a rare instance of justice reaching the highest echelons of power. Across Africa, analysts suggested the conviction marks a shift in how courts could hold politicians accountable once they leave office.

Kinshasa, October 7 – Joseph Kabila’s sentencing last Tuesday felt like a shock to many in East Africa and beyond, though the signs were always there. Once hailed as the quiet, reluctant leader who took the reins of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) after his father’s assassination in 2001, Kabila spent nearly two decades projecting calm authority while presiding over one of Africa’s most resource-rich but deeply troubled nations. Now, handed a death sentence and a trail of leaked investigative files lay bare a former president deeply enmeshed in corruption, state capture, and the systematic plunder of public wealth.

President Kabila’s downfall mirrors the long shadow of another former strongman, Angola’s José Eduardo dos Santos, who ruled for 38 years until 2017. Once celebrated as the man who ended Angola’s brutal civil war and rebuilt the country on its oil wealth, dos Santos carefully nurtured the image of a fatherly statesman. But by the time of his death in 2022, that image had collapsed. Court records, investigative leaks, and global asset freezes instead revealed a ruler who presided over one of Africa’s most entrenched systems of cronyism and loot, where state oil revenues became the private piggy bank of a ruling family and its allies.

Both men led resource-rich nations, presided over spiraling inequality, and left behind legacies scarred by corruption that courts, investigative journalists, and anti-graft agencies are now unearthing.

Kabila, after 18 years in power, stepped down following a contested election that marked the DRC’s first peaceful transfer of power in January 2019. Dos Santos, on other hand after nearly four decades in Angola, handpicked his successor and retired. Yet neither enjoyed a quiet and blissful retirement as they might have thought. Instead, they remain at the center of sprawling international scandals, with their families and inner circles facing relentless legal scrutiny over one core charge – the systematic looting of their nations’ wealth.

Together, Kabila and dos Santos embody the spectacular downfall of Africa’s “strongmen turned oligarchs,” illustrating a chilling example of how power, oil, and minerals became weapons of state capture that enriched elites while leaving ordinary citizens in crushing poverty.

The M23 describes itself as a Congolese rebel group defending the country’s Tutsi community. Photo Courtesy AFP

From reluctant leader to accused profiteer

When Joseph Kabila assumed the presidency in 2001 at just 29 years old, he was seen as a cautious leader, uninterested in the pomp of power. His early tenure focused on ending Congo’s civil war, earning him a careful international praise. Yet over time, corruption and crony capitalism became synonymous with his rule.

Last week, September 30, a Congolese military tribunal sentenced him to death in absentia for “war crimes, treason, and crimes against humanity.” The tribunal accused him of “murder, sexual assault, torture, and insurrection,” allegedly committed under his watch and which is linked to his alleged support of the M23 rebel movement – an outfit that left over 3,000 dead and nearly one million displaced, according to United Nations reports.

Presiding judge Lieutenant-General Joseph Mutombo Katalayi said Kabila was guilty on multiple counts and ordered him to pay around $50 billion (KSh 7.5 trillion) in reparations to the state and victims, a penalty so large that many observers say dwarfs the country’s annual GDP. The tribunal also demanded $29 billion (KSh 4.35 trillion) in damages to the Congolese government, and $2 billion (KSh 300 billion) each to North Kivu and South Kivu, his native province.

According to Congo Hold-up project, which exposed over $138 million (KSh 20.7 billion) in questionable payments through accounts linked to the Kabila family and close associates between 2013 and 2018. Human Rights Watch report also noted in 2022: “The Kabila years entrenched a culture of impunity where state assets were treated as private reserves of the ruling elite.”

Further evidence from the Sentry, a Washington-based watchdog, mapped a vast network of companies linked to the Kabila family spanning mining, banking, and aviation. In its 2019 investigation Covert Capital, The Sentry documented how a company linked to Kabila’s family, Kwanza Capital, circulated “as much as $140 million (roughly Ksh 18 billion) may have circulated through these accounts…functioning as a ready source of cash for family members and friends of former President Kabila.”

A follow-up report in 2021, The Backchannel: State Capture and Bribery in Congo’s Deal of the Century, further detailed how shell companies and intermediaries collaborated with political elites under the Sicomines agreements, revealing how state resources were systematically diverted through opaque financial networks to enrich those close to power.

Even Gécamines, Congo’s state-owned mining giant, was implicated. Global Witness reported in 2017 that as much as $750 million (KSh 112.5 billion) in copper and cobalt revenues between 2013 and 2015 could not be accounted for, funds that Congolese say deprived the state of resources for public infrastructure such as health, school, hospitals and roads.

Kabila, now 54, skipped his trial and is believed to be in South Africa. Prosecutors relied on testimony from Eric Nkuba, a former aide to rebel leader Corneille Nangaa, who said Kabila “regularly communicated with Nangaa by phone about how to overthrow the government of President Félix Tshisekedi.”

When sentencing the DRC ex-ruler, the military tribunal said that, “in applying Article 7 of the Military Penal Code, it imposes a single sentence, namely the most severe one, which is the death penalty.” For the locals and East Africa, Kabila’s sentencing was not just about crimes of the past but about the collapse of a long-standing shield of impunity. For years, DRC’s Senate protected him through political immunity. However, in May 2025, that shield cracked when lawmakers voted to lift his immunity, opening the door for prosecution.

To the locals the verdict marked the culmination of years of calls for accountability following widespread allegations of corruption and human rights abuses under Kabila’s rule. In Kinshasa, legal observers and civil society groups described the judgment as a rare instance of justice reaching the highest levels of power. Across the continent, analysts noted that the conviction signaled a potential shift in how African courts approach cases involving former leaders. As prosecutor, Richard Bondo stated after the ruling, “Justice rendered in the name of the Congolese people gives satisfaction to its people.”

José Eduardo dos Santos, who plundered Angola, died in 2022 while exiled in Barcelona. Photo Courtesy

Eduardo dos Santos: The oil president who built a dynasty of wealth

While Kabila’s case is explosive and current, Eduardo dos Santos’ downfall has been more like a slow-motion implosion. Ruling Angola from 1979 to 2017, he oversaw the country’s rise into one of Africa’s top oil producers. Yet billions from its oilfields scarcely touched ordinary citizens.

Transparency International in 2013 called Angola “a textbook case of state capture.” While most Angolans lived on less than $2 (KSh 257) a day, dos Santos’ family amassed vast fortunes. His daughter Isabel became the most notorious symbol: once lauded by Forbes as Africa’s richest woman with a fortune of $3.5 billion (KSh 450 billion), but later investigative leaks exposed how her riches were built.

The Luanda Leaks of 2020, published by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), examined over 700,000 documents showing how the dos Santos family built a globe-spanning empire through oil and diamonds. They exposed more than 400 companies in 41 countries, including secrecy havens like Malta and Mauritius, used to siphon billions. Isabel, who called the leaks a “witch hunt,” faced asset freezes in Portugal, court cases in Angola, and accusations of embezzlement and money laundering.

João Lourenço, who succeeded dos Santos in 2017, turned against the family in a bid to rebrand himself as a reformer. By 2019, Isabel’s assets were frozen across Europe, and Angolan prosecutors declared: “There is strong evidence of illegal enrichment at the expense of the Angolan people.”

Eduardo dos Santos died in Barcelona in July 2022, far from Luanda, amid bitter disputes between his children and the Angolan state. To many, his death marked the symbolic end of an era of impunity.

Isabel Dos Santos, daughter of the president, is reportedly Africa’s richest woman and heads up the state oil company Sonangol. Photo Courtesy

The anatomy of capture: oil, minerals, and militarized states

The twin downfalls of ex-presidents, Kabila and dos Santos highlight a larger African tragedy of resource wealth that promised prosperity instead fueled patronage and corruption. Congo’s cobalt and Angola’s oil, which could have transformed both countries, became lifelines for elite enrichment.

In Congo, mining revenues vanished through opaque accounts tied to political networks. In Angola, oil revenues were funneled through Sonangol to build a family empire. In both, weak institutions, militarized politics, and compromised courts delayed accountability for decades, critics observe.

Human Rights Watch observed in 2019: “Both Angola and the DRC showcase how entrenched elites have captured state institutions and natural resources to serve private interests while silencing dissent.” That silencing was brutal; journalists and opposition were targeted in both countries, from Congo’s assassinations and harassment to Angola’s arrests of investigative reporters like Rafael Marques de Morais.

Taken together, the stories of Joseph Kabila and José Eduardo dos Santos reflect the continent’s wider struggle with resource-fueled state capture. In Kinshasa, Kabila’s charge sheet tied him to rebel violence and illicit financial networks. In Luanda, the Luanda leaks exposed how dos Santos built a globe-spanning financial empire through oil and diamonds.

Both cases, critics say demonstrate how leaders turned natural resources into private wealth while leaving citizens in poverty. Today, courts in Kinshasa and Luanda are probing cases once thought untouchable. Meanwhile, international leak investigations, from Congo Hold-up to Luanda Leaks, are equipping civil society and prosecutors with tools to unravel the webs of illicit enrichment. Which country and its political dynasty will be next?

Read Our Next Hard-hitting Analysis Part 2…..

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