Congo-Brazzaville had become independent in 1960. The rule of the first president,
Fulbert Youlou, developed in an increasingly
authoritarian direction. During a tour of Haut-Congo in August 1962, Youlou proposed turning Congo into a
one-party state, led by his party UDDIA. At the time, other political parties had ceased to function as an effective opposition, whilst the
trade union movement
CGAT and the
Congolese Youth Union (two groups singled out by Youlou as '
communists') had suffered crackdowns. Youlou's party was dominated by his ethnic group, the Brazzaville based Lari, and as such they dominated much of Congolese society and industry at the time. Youlou's increasing favoritism massively sidelined and aggravated the northern peoples, not helped by his unhelpful comments that they might be better off joining the
Central African Republic instead of staying with Congo. Unpopular, corrupt and now having alienated virtually all non-Lari in the country, the stage was set for tensions to reach a head. By mid-1963, the Congolese labour movement had become increasingly vocal.
A state visit by
Guinean president
Sékou Touré on June 5–6 proved a turning point. During Touré's visit, trade unions and youth movements held protests, hailing Touré and ridiculing Youlou. Later, a united front of trade union centres was formed. On July 2, 1963, two joint trade union committees were formed, one of them consisting of CGAT, CSAL and CATC. In protest against the proposal to install a one-party rule, the trade unions called for a
general strike on August 13, 1963. ==August 13==