A Congolese challenge to Rwanda's grip on the OIF's top job just turned a Francophone leadership race into a geopolitical showdown.
DRC puts Lumumba forward for OIF chief
DRC puts Lumumba forward for OIF chief
- Juliana Amato Lumumba got the nod from the DRC to run for Secretary-General of the OIF.
- She would be going up against Rwanda's Louise Mushikiwabo, who has held the role since 2019.
- Kinshasa framed the move as pushing for a more modern and inclusive Francophonie.
- Crispin Mbadu Phanzu, the Minister Delegate for Francophone affairs, made the official announcement.
- Lumumba previously served as the DRC's vice minister and later minister of culture and arts.
- Her stint as Secretary-General of UACCIA in Cairo ran from 2007 to 2015.
- Academic credentials trace back to EHESS in Paris.
- Over three decades of governance and diplomatic experience back her candidacy.
- Mushikiwabo became the first African woman to lead the Paris-based organization.
- Kinshasa accuses Rwanda of backing the M23 rebel group in eastern Congo, which Kigali denies.
- Fielding a rival candidate doubles as a diplomatic flex for the DRC.
- Economic integration, women's leadership, and multilingualism anchor Lumumba's platform.
- Pan-African entrepreneurial development is a big piece of her pitch.
- No confirmed date exists yet for the next Secretary-General vote.
- African member states make up the OIF's majority, so regional alliances will be tested hard.