Pascal Lissouba

Politician

Birthday November 15, 1931

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Tsinguidi, French Congo, French Equatorial Africa

DEATH DATE 2020-8-24, Perpignan, France (88 years old)

Nationality Republic of the Congo

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1931

Pascal Lissouba (15 November 1931 – 24 August 2020) was a Congolese politician who was the first democratically elected President of the Republic of the Congo and served from 31 August 1992 until 25 October 1997.

1948

He began his secondary studies in Brazzaville and gained his education at the Lycée Félix Faure in Nice (1948–52), where he obtained a baccalaureate.

1956

He then studied Agronomy at the École Supérieure d'Agriculture in Tunis and secured a diploma in agricultural engineering in 1956.

1958

At the University of Paris (1958–61) he received a doctoral degree in biology.

He was also a fellow trainee at the National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) in Paris and at ORSTOM.

1961

In June 1961, he worked as a researcher at ORSTOM.

He was appointed lecturer in vegetal biology, by a French Ministry of National Education decree on 3 November 1961.

1962

Initially he was a civil servant, working as a managing director in the Department of Agriculture (1962–63), having returned in 1962.

1963

But his abilities advanced him to become Minister of Agriculture, Livestock, Water, and Forestry on 16 August 1963 until 1966 and then Prime Minister (1963–66) under President Alphonse Massamba-Débat.

1966

Afterwards, he became a genetics professor at the University of Brazzaville (1966–1971) and later director of the Ecole Supérieure des Sciences in 1970.

1968

He was appointed Minister of State for Planning, then for Agriculture (1968–1969), before being sacked by the government.

When Massamba-Débat was overthrown in 1968 Lissouba remained in government under Marien Ngouabi and although he was suspended from political activity from 1969 to 1971 he was on the Central Committee of the Congolese Workers Party in 1973.

1977

In 1977, he was implicated for involvement in the assassination of Ngouabi and was arrested.

He was sentenced to life imprisonment and hard labour in 1977.

1979

He was released in 1979 but had to live in exile in France from 1979 to 1990.

In France, he was a professor of genetics at the University of Paris and then worked for UNESCO in Paris and Nairobi.

1991

When President Denis Sassou Nguesso was forced to move the Congo towards democracy in 1991, Lissouba returned in February 1992 and was elected president in the August 1992 elections.

He secured 36% of the vote as head of the left-wing Pan-African Union for Social Democracy (Union panafricaine pour la démocratie sociale, UPADS).

In the run-off with second-placed Bernard Kolelas, Lissouba got 61% of the vote.

Conflict soon broke out however.

A coalition of opposition groups and their militias accused Lissouba of rigging the elections.

1993

His eldest daughter, Mireille Lissouba, was his chief of staff from 1993 to 1996, while his younger daughter, Danielle Bineka is a university professor and writer, both currently exiled in Canada.

1995

Widespread civil war was averted when Gabon and the Organisation of African Unity intervened, but sporadic fighting continued until January 1995.

1996

His mother, Marie Bouanga died in 1996.

1997

He was overthrown by the former and current President Denis Sassou Nguesso in the 1997 civil war.

Lissouba was born in Tsinguidi, south-west Congo, to Bandjabi parents.

He attended primary school in Mossendjo and Boko.

Fighting broke out again in June 1997 when Lissouba engaged militias loyal to former President Col. Denis Sassou Nguesso of the Congolese Labor Party (PCT) in Brazzaville, accusing the former president of an attempted coup.

Sassou Nguesso, however, was able to escape and stage a counterattack.

Thus began a 4-month civil war that destroyed or damaged much of the capital.

In early October 1997, Angolan troops invaded Congo on the side of Sassou.

Most of Brazzaville fell to rebel and Angolan forces on 14 October 1997, and Lissouba fled; within two days the capital was under the control of forces loyal to Sassou Nguesso, and Pointe-Noire fell with little resistance.

Sassou Nguesso proclaimed himself President on 25 October 1997, but militia forces loyal to Lissouba continued a guerrilla war.

1999

The vital Congo-Ocean Railway from the coastal city of Pointe-Noire was cut, and Brazzaville was heavily damaged before a cease-fire was agreed to in December 1999.

Following his overthrow, Lissouba lived in exile in London.

2002

He intended to return to the Congo for the 2002 elections, but in December 2001 he was tried in absentia in Brazzaville, and sentenced to 30 years forced labor for treason and corruption, related to a $150 million oil deal with the American company Occidental Petroleum.

2004

Since 2004, he had been living in Paris in exile.

He was first married to Annette Chantegreil, then to Jocelyne Rosdam, a French national and is the father of eleven children.

2020

Lissouba died in Perpignan, France, on 24 August 2020, due to complications from Alzheimer's disease, aged 88.