It’s
hard to believe that it’s been ten weeks since we started the endline survey to
evaluate Dutch funding of Congolese NGOs, and six weeks since we finished. Over
the four weeks of the survey we visited about 990 households in about 75
villages. We were 42 people in total; five teams of seven research assistants
each (including two team leaders), six supervisors, and one all-around badass,
Koen, the PhD student who organized and led the survey. Here’s a picture of
Koen during our first day “in the field”, i.e. in a village where people live
year-round. Normally we wouldn’t have this many people in one village, but this
was a trial run in a village that was not actually part of our sample.
Normally, one of the two team leaders from each team visits a village the day before we want to survey residents. She explains to the chief what we’d like to do, and asks permission to come back the next day with five other research assistants. She also visits each household we want to survey to give them a heads up. Each research assistant carried out 2-4 interviews per day.
The
interviews normally took place in the interviewees home. For example:
Sometimes
they took place outside. Here’s Nicaise entering responses into his tablet:
And
sometimes the interviewees were only available out in their fields:
The
villages that we visited were in the southern part of the province of South
Kivu, in the territories of Uvira and Fizi. If, like me, your passport was sent
to Kinshasa for three months for a visa, then you can’t travel southeast from
Bukavu through Rwanda, with its fancy “paved roads”, and arrive in Uvira in about
an hour. Instead you have to drive over “The Escarpment”, a bumpy four hour
ride on the road that you see to the right in this picture:
To
the left you can see the Ruzizi river. The Ruzizi marks the border between
Rwanda and DRC; and further south between Burundi and DRC. Many of the villages
that we visited were in the Ruzizi Plains, a fertile area where, for at least
twenty years, there has been a series of violent conflicts between people with
farms and people who graze cattle.
Further
south, in Fizi Territory, the Ruzizi meets Lake Tanganyika. It was in the
lakeside mountains of Fizi that Che Guevara and a small group of Cubans arrived
in the DRC 49 years ago. They joined some rebels led by a young Congolese man
named Laurent-Désiré Kabila. After seven frustrating months, Guevara and the
surviving Cubans left. In his (published!) diary about that time, Guevara wrote
about Kabila: "Nothing
leads me to believe he is the man of the hour." Thirty-two years later,
Kabila would be hand-picked by the presidents of Rwanda and Uganda as the
frontman for the invasion that brought an end to Mobutu’s 32-year reign in the
DRC. Kabila lasted four years as head of state before he was assassinated by
his body guard, a former child solder. Kabila’s son, age 29 at the time, was
appointed as the new president and subsequently won the elections in 2006 and
2011, meaning that the constitution requires him to leave office by the next
elections in 2016…unless he changes the constitution. That seems to me to be
the main topic of conversations about politics at the moment.
Sorry, was I writing about a survey?
Sorry, was I writing about a survey?