Within days of being independent from Belgium, the new
Republic of the Congo found itself torn between competing political factions, as well as by foreign interference. As the situation deteriorated,
Moise Tshombe declared the independence of
Katanga Province as the
State of Katanga on 11 July 1960. Kalonji, claiming that the Baluba were being persecuted in the Congo and needed their own state in their traditional
Kasai homeland, followed suit shortly afterwards and declared the autonomy of the
diamond-rich
South Kasai on 8 August, with himself as head. Unlike Tshombe, Kalonji shrank from declaring full independence from the Congo and rather declared its "autonomy" with a hypothetical, federalised Congo. He, as representatives of his party, continued to sit in the Congolese parliaments in
Léopoldville. In emulation of
Winston Churchill, he adopted the
V sign for victory to express his confidence in South Kasai's ability to achieve its goals. On 12 April 1961, Kalonji's father, Edmond Mukanya Mulenda, was granted the title
Mulopwe (which roughly translates to "emperor" or "god-king"), but he immediately "abdicated" in favor of his son. On 16 July, In April 1961, Kalonji took the royal title Mulopwe ("King of the Baluba") to tie the state more closely to the pre-colonial Luba Empire. The act divided the South Kasaian authorities and Kalonji was disavowed by the majority of South Kasai's parliamentary representatives in Léopoldville.[d] The move was controversial with members of Kalonji's own party and cost him much support. Kalonji's reign, however, proved to be short-lived. As preparation for the invasion of Katanga, Congolese government troops invaded and occupied South Kasai, becoming involved in ethnic-based violence and displacing thousands of Baluba. On 30 December, Kalonji was arrested. He managed to escape shortly afterwards. The administrative apparatus of South Kasai survived, under Congolese occupation, until a coup d'état was led against Kalonjists by the state's Prime Minister, Joseph Ngalula, in October 1962 when the state returned to the Congo. ==Legacy and subsequent activities==