In the 1990s, the dictatorship of Marshal Mobutu, established in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1965, was running out of steam. The oligarchic system had ruined the country, and his Western allies had stopped supporting him. Meanwhile, the Hutu regime in Rwanda collapsed in the face of an offensive by Paul Kagame's Rwandan Patriotic Front. The Interahamwe extremists, who had committed genocide against the Tutsis, took refuge in Zaire. Rwanda decided to eliminate this threat to its borders and allied itself with various Congolese rebels opposed to Mobutu, grouped around Laurent-Désiré Kabila. Still under FAZ control in April 1997, Lubumbashi was the country's second-largest city and the capital of the province of
Katanga, then known as Shaba. The city is rich in copper and cobalt mines and is the AFDL's last strategic objective before the capital
Kinshasa. Shaba was also the home region of Laurent-Désiré Kabila. Finally, the province seceded in 1960 to form the state of Katanga. Independence was lost in 1963, but the province retained an autonomist tradition in the face of the centralist Mobutu regime. == The forces at work ==