DAKAR, Senegal
Three Americans involved in a brazen weekend attack on Congo’s presidential palace formed an unlikely band under the leadership of eccentric opposition figure Christian Malanga, who dabbled in gold mining and used cars before persuading his Utah-born son to join in the foiled coup, according to officials’ description of events.
Six people, including Malanga,
were killed and dozens arrested, including the three Americans, following that
attack and another on the residence of a close ally of President Felix
Tshisekedi, the Congolese army spokesperson, Brig. Gen. Sylvain Ekenge, said.
Ekenge said Malanga was killed
in a shootout early Sunday with presidential guards. The situation “is under
control,” he said.
Authorities said they were
still trying to untangle how Malanga’s 21-year-old son, Marcel, went from
playing high school football to allegedly trying to unseat the leader of one of
Africa’s largest countries.
“My son is innocent,” his
mother, Brittney Sawyer, wrote in an email to The Associated Press, declining
to elaborate.
Sawyer had regularly posted
proud family photos on social media, including one in December showing Marcel,
a young sister and a toddler hugging in matching Christmas pajamas. In 2020,
she posted photos of Marcel lifting weights and dancing during COVID lockdown.
In a Facebook post early
Monday, Sawyer angrily wrote that her son had followed his father. “This was an
innocent boy following his father. I’m so tired of all the videos being posted
all over and being sent to me. God will take care of you people!”
One
video that circulated on social media showed her son alongside a bloodied white
man, whose identity was unclear, both covered in dust and surrounded by
Congolese soldiers. Marcel has his hands raised and a frightened look on his
face.
It was far from the persona
that Marcel appeared to have been building in videos recently posted on
Facebook and TikTok showing him posing with stacks of dollar bills and talking
about women.
His father, Malanga, had
described himself on his website as a refugee who thrived after settling in the
U.S. with his family in the 1990s. He said he became a leader of a Congolese
opposition political party and met high-level officials in Washington and the
Vatican. He also described himself as a devoted husband and father of eight.
Court records and interviews
paint another picture.
In 2001, the year he turned
18, Malanga was convicted in Utah in incidents including assault with a firearm
that resulted in a 30-day jail sentence and three years of probation. That same
year, he was charged with domestic violence assault in one incident and battery
and disturbing the peace in another, but he pleaded not guilty and all counts
in both cases were dismissed.
In 2004, he was charged with
domestic violence with threat of using a dangerous weapon, but he pleaded not
guilty and the charges were dismissed. Since 2004, records show several cases
related to a custody dispute and a child support dispute. It is unclear if the
disputes involved Sawyer.
Malanga’s relatives gathered
Monday afternoon at the West Jordan home of his mother, Chantal Malanga, to
mourn. A steady flow of friends dropped by with plates of food and to offer
condolences.
Sydney, a cousin of Christian
Malanga’s who answered the door, told AP the family was feeling “heartbroken”
and “so raw” after learning of his death. They were discussing plans for a
possible funeral in Utah, she said, without giving further details.
Malanga described himself as
the organizer of the United Congolese Party, a movement aimed at organizing
emigres like him against the “current Congolese dictatorship government
regime.” He also described himself as president of the “New Zaire” government
in exile and published a manifesto that detailed plans including creating
business opportunities and reforming Congo’s security services.
Photos on Facebook and his
website show him meeting then-senior U.S. political figures, including former
Utah Rep. Rob Bishop and New York Rep. Peter King.
Bishop told AP he did not
recall the meeting and couldn’t tell when the photo was taken. King could not
be reached for comment.
Dino Mahtani, an independent
researcher into African issues, said he first heard of Malanga in 2018 while
serving as a political adviser to the United Nations in Congo. He said
Congolese authorities voiced suspicions that Malanga was involved in a purported
plot to kill then-President Joseph Kabila.
In an interview, Mahtani said
he had never met Malanga in person but thinks Malanga was obsessed with
capturing some form of power in Congo.
He also speculated Malanga had
been set up or betrayed in the weekend attack, given the implausible way it was
carried out.
“Somebody put him up to this.
It could be external plotters, but given his previous close relationship with
at least one of Tshiskedi’s current military commanders, there’s some chance
the plot was known about internally and this allowed them to move quickly,”
Mahtani said.
The alleged coup attempt began
at the Kinshasa residence of Vital Kamerhe, a federal legislator and a
candidate for speaker of the National Assembly of Congo. His guards killed the
attackers, officials said.
Malanga, meanwhile, was
live-streaming video from the presidential palace in which he is seen
surrounded by several people in military uniforms wandering around in the
middle of the night. He was later killed while resisting arrest, Congolese
authorities said.
Congo officials have not
commented on how the attackers were able to get inside.
“Its really difficult to
imagine how 20, 30 guys thought that by storming the presidential palace when
nobody is around at 4 a.m. in the morning could somehow take over the Congolese
state,” Mahtani said.
A second American allegedly
involved was identified as Benjamin Reuben Zalman-Polun, according to images of
a U.S. passport circulated by Congolese media. He graduated from the University
of Colorado and attended business administration classes at Georgetown
University, court records indicate. He later started a commodity trading
business and worked as a courier and Uber driver, the records show.
His connection to Malanga
appeared to be through a gold mining company that was set up in Mozambique in
2022, according to an official journal published by Mozambique’s government,
and a report by Africa Intelligence newsletter.
Zalman-Polun pleaded guilty in
2014 to drug trafficking charges in the U.S., admitting that he conspired with
a friend to ship at least 20 kilograms of marijuana from a home base in Lake
Tahoe, California, to customers across the United States. Prosecutors requested
leniency, citing the “substantial assistance” they said he provided in their
investigation.
His attorney in that case did
not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.
No information was released on
the third American.
The U.S. Embassy in Kinshasa
said it was aware “U.S. citizens might have been involved in Sunday’s events,”
adding in a statement that it would cooperate with authorities “as they
investigate these violent criminal acts.”
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