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・ Christophe Dussart
・ Christophe Edaleine
・ Christophe Fabre
・ Christophe Ferron
・ Christophe Flacher
・ Christophe Fouquet
・ Christophe Fournier
・ Christophe Frassa
・ Christophe Freitas
・ Christophe Freyss
・ Christophe Gadbled
・ Christophe Gaffory
・ Christophe Gagliano
・ Christophe Galtier
・ Christophe Gans
Christophe Gbenye
・ Christophe Geiger
・ Christophe Godin
・ Christophe Goumotsios
・ Christophe Grondin
・ Christophe Grégoire
・ Christophe Guedes
・ Christophe Guelpa
・ Christophe Guilloteau
・ Christophe Guyot
・ Christophe Guénot
・ Christophe Himmer
・ Christophe Hondelatte
・ Christophe Honoré
・ Christophe Horlaville


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Christophe Gbenye : ウィキペディア英語版
Christophe Gbenye
Christophe Gbenye (c.1927 – 3 February 2015) was a Congolese rebel who along with Pierre Mulele and Gaston Soumialot were the leaders of Simba Rebellion, an insurrection against the Government of the African state known at the time as the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 1964.〔http://www.onwar.com/aced/nation/cat/congo/fcongo1964b.htm〕
Gbenye was born in the Eastern Region of what was then the Belgian Congo. At the time of Congolese independence on 30 June 1960 he became Interior Affairs Minister under Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba.
Following Lumbumba's removal from power in September 1960, Gbenye and many of his former supporters relocated to Brazzaville. There they set up a revolutionary movement under the title of ''Comité National de Libération'', headed by Gbenye. Assistance was sought from the Soviet Union in the form of equipment and training. Under the leadership of Gbenye, Mulele and Soumialot much of the eastern Congo was overrun by young rebel fighters known as ''simbas'' (lions).
Gbenye has been described as a henchman,〔(Dr. Carlson: Rebel With Noble Cause ) Milwaukee Sentinel, Aug 28, 1965, James H. Johnston〕 and served as President of the rebel state, the People's Republic of the Congo, established by the rebels in Stanleyville. In late 1967 the rebellion was suppressed by the ANC (National Congolese Army) and Gbenye and other leaders fled the country.
In 2010 the then 83-year-old Gbenye was living in retirement in Kinshasa.〔http://www.rnw.nl/english/article/congo-begins-its-“second-independence”-0〕 He died in the night from 2 to 3 February 2015.〔(Itimbiri ya Sika, 5th of february 2015 )〕〔(Christophe Gbenye, Radical Nationalist in Congo, Dies at 88 )〕
== References ==



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