At the beginning of the
Second Congo War against the government of
Laurent-Désiré Kabila, Wamba was unanimously elected head of the rebel
Rally for Congolese Democracy (RCD), which was backed by
Uganda and
Rwanda and based in the town of
Goma. However, the RCD gradually split from November 1998 until 16 May 1999, as it became clear that Rwanda and its supporters' goals were limited to replacement of Kabila. Several attempts were made on Wamba's life during this period, coinciding with attempts to destroy his political power in the RCD. On 16 May 1999,
Émile Ilunga was named the new head of the RCD after manoeuvring by Rwanda, and Wamba fled to the Ugandan-controlled town of
Kisangani. The faction of the RCD he maintained control of was variously known as the Movement for Liberation (RCD-ML), RCD-Kisangani, or RCD-Wamba. The main faction is sometimes referred to as
RCD-Goma. The two factions shortly engaged in fierce battles in Kisangani, following which Wamba retreated to
Bunia in the
Ituri region of the northeastern DRC. Wamba was faced with an internal revolt by
Mbusa Nyamwisi, leading to another split in his party's faction. His organization remained known as the RCD-Kisangani (RCD-K), while the Nyamwisi-led group was known as the RCD-ML. In 2001, Wamba denounced a Ugandan proposal to unite the RCD-K, RCD-ML and
Movement for the Liberation of Congo (MLC) as an unwelcome foreign imposition. The further disintegration of the RCD-K to the point it was without any significant military force may have been the result of Ugandan withdrawal of its support. This action, which took place as the
Ituri conflict continued escalating, was seen by some members of the
Lendu ethnic group as a support against what they saw as the pro-
Hema bias of Uganda. ==The Post-War Period ==