Lumumba's party won a plurality of parliamentary seats in the Congo's first free elections. He weighed his options for the Minister of Foreign Affairs between Kanza, André Mandi, and
Justin Bomboko. He mistrusted Bomboko, whom the Belgians supported and with whom he had political differences. Kanza, who was well acquainted with Bomboko, suggested that he himself be made Delegate to the
United Nations (UN) with ministerial status, so he could operate with autonomy, while Bomboko should receive charge of Foreign Affairs, because he was an elected deputy and had more political support. Lumumba eventually agreed to this proposal. The
Lumumba Government was invested by Parliament on 24 June. Of the members of the ministerial cabinet, only Kanza and Bomboko had university educations. The Congo was formally granted independence on 30 June 1960 as the
Republic of the Congo. In mid-September Lumumba was removed from power by Colonel
Joseph Mobutu and placed under arrest. Kanza approached Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev and Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko for help, but was informed that there was little they could do. He then appealed to United States President-elect
John F. Kennedy through
Eleanor Roosevelt, asking that he intervene to protect Lumumba. Kennedy responded that the handling of prisoners was a
United Nations matter. Lumumba was eventually executed on 17 January 1961. Meanwhile, Lumumba's absence had created a dilemma surrounding the authority of his delegation at the United Nations, which was led by Kanza. On 8 November 1960, President
Joseph Kasa-Vubu proposed his own delegation, leading to a dispute in the
General Assembly. On 22 November 1960, the Assembly voted to recognize Kasa-Vubu's delegation, thereby subverting Kanza. He then served as the representative for
Antoine Gizenga's brief
rival government based in
Stanleyville. In 1962, Kanza, having rejoined the central government, was transferred to be
chargé d'affaires of the
United Kingdom embassy. In 1964, he was recalled to the Congo. He soon entered a dispute with the new prime minister,
Moïse Tshombe, and joined the
Conseil National de Libération (CNL) which was leading the
Simba rebellion in the eastern Congo. He provided the CNL with his "extensive contacts in African diplomatic milieux" and his "considerable prestige" among the Congolese intellectual elites. Kanza was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs in the CNL-led "
People's Republic of the Congo", based at Stanleyville. Following the Simba rebellion's defeat and
Mobutu's definitive seizure of power in 1965, Kanza fled to
Europe. He shortly thereafter moved to the
United States and in the same year published a largely autobiographical novel,
Sans rancune. In 1972, he published a memoir, entitled,
The Rise and Fall of Patrice Lumumba: Conflict in the Congo. The book covered his own personal experiences as the Conge became independent and focused on his interactions with Lumumba. He later became a professor of politics at the
University of Massachusetts Boston. Kanza returned to the Congo following the declaration of a general amnesty by Mobutu on 21 May 1983. In 1992, a "Conference Nationale Souveraine" was convened to formulate a process for democratising the Congo. Kanza took advantage of the liberalisation to reestablish his family's political base in Kongo Central. The Mobutuist factions and the opposing Union Sacrée de l'Opposition got into a dispute as to who had the right to select the next prime minister. In an attempt to undercut the opposition, Mobutu hosted a conclave in March 1993, to nominate a prime minister from among those participating. Kanza, a member of the Union Sacrée, attended the conclave but was ultimately passed over for the appointment. However, more radical members of the Union were furious about his solicitation and immediately expelled him from the organisation. In June 1997, Kanza was appointed Minister of International Cooperation in the new government of
Laurent Kabila. By 1998, he was the Minister of Labour and Social Security. Kanza died of a heart attack in London on 25 October 2004, aged 71, while serving as the Congo's ambassador to
Sweden. == See also ==