Home Africa Congo Transfers Americans Jailed Over Failed Coup Amid Mineral Talks

Congo Transfers Americans Jailed Over Failed Coup Amid Mineral Talks

The Congolese presidency said the Americans had been transferred to U.S. authorities after their sentences were commuted last week to serve their time at home.

Three U.S. citizens imprisoned for their involvement in a failed coup attempt in the Democratic Republic of Congo were handed over to U.S. custody on Tuesday, Congolese officials said. The transfer took place as high-level discussions between the two nations progressed on matters of security and mineral agreements, the Congolese presidency told Reuters.

The presidency said the Americans had been transferred to U.S. authorities after their sentences were commuted last week to serve their time at home.

The deal to hand over the Americans was finalised when U.S. President Donald Trump’s senior Africa adviser, Massad Boulos, traveled to Congo to hold meetings with President Felix Tshisekedi in the capital Kinshasa.

Their release comes at a time of intensifying negotiations between Washington and Kinshasa. The United States is open to exploring critical minerals partnerships, the State Department told Reuters last month, after Congo pitched a minerals-for-security deal to the Trump administration.

Joseph Szlavik-Soto, a lobbyist working for Kinshasa, said the Congolese had also agreed to pay for the damage caused by protesters who attacked the U.S. embassy and other missions earlier this year.

The State Department declined to comment on the matter.

Congo wants the U.S. to play a bigger role in securing the war-ravaged country, where fighting in the east has raised fears of a wider regional conflict.

Violence Rising

The violence has escalated since January, when Rwandan-backed M23 rebels made a swift advance, capturing the two largest cities in the east.


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Washington is interested in securing greater access to Congo’s minerals, which are used in mobile phones and electric cars, and are currently exploited predominantly by China and its mining companies.

The Trump administration hasn’t said how it might provide security, but a former senior defence official said options could include providing troops or contractors to train Congolese forces.

“I hope it could work in a fashion that respects human rights and contributes to long-term stability in this important region. This will be very challenging in the DRC context,” the official said.

The Americans were among 37 defendants in Congo sentenced to death by a military court in September.

The coup attempt last May was led by Christian Malanga, a U.S.-based Congolese politician, whose 22-year-old son was among the Americans arrested.

Marcel Malanga, who was visiting Congo with a high school friend, said at the trial his father had threatened to kill them if they did not obey his orders. His mother posted a statement on Facebook saying the family needed time and did not wish to comment.

(With inputs from Reuters)