Kelly the Mad
Congolese Empire
- Oct 28, 2020
- 1,082
Omari Gowon was a poor student who had taken the money his small Congolese community could spare and went to university in the newly rising Greater Romania. After his four years of education, he found his calling in the military and soon rose to the rank of colonel. His charisma brought him to widespread popularity among the enlisted men, to a point where the at the time Commander of the Army Vlad Dracula came to personally speak to him. Over drinks, they talked about each other's pasts and especially Omari's hometown he had fled for higher education. He insisted that education and healthcare in the Congo were so dismal, no country could hope to grow in the same conditions, regardless of the rigor of the people. Their talks drifted to the importance of a powerful government and military, and the prospects of Moldovan land. They concluded a night of drinking with pledges of loyalty to each other and parted ways until a year later. When Vlad took over as dictator of Romania, there was a jubilant celebration in the armed forces. They knew that their new ruler would treat them well, having come from the same background. When Vlad debated who he would elect as Commander of the Army, he passed over Omari. The Congolese man came to Vlad in a fury, demanding an explanation. In response, Vlad told him that he had bigger plans for him. Packing him up on a ship with a bodyguard of other African soldiers, he sent him back to the Congo with plenty of funds to start building an army. Under the claim that he was a long-lost descendant of the former native monarchy that ruled over much of the Congo, he established a following of diehard supporters from the fringe rural areas of the country, and slowly but surely expanded his influence into urban areas. With help from several Romanian soldiers, he trained his growing force of armed men as a professional army, as well as a guerrilla force.
His first major breakthrough was when he deposed a major drug trafficking gang in Kinshasa, the capital. Through armed force they slaughtered many of the gang members, taking the rest prisoner and burning their supplies. He continued going through the capital city, a major source for drug trafficking due to corruption and lax restrictions on shipping, breaking up gangs of drug smugglers, and executing the "enemies of the public". Soon more people, some from opposing gangs and some from the general populace, joined up with his own group to help fight the countries corruption. At this point, he adopted a name for his group: The Congolese Peoples Guard. The CPG wreaked havoc within the city criminal hierarchy, in return making it a very large target for other gangs, hired guns, and bribed police officers. They were seeing constant fighting, and the land they controlled would ebb and flow.
They began expanding back into rural areas, and after busting up several other armed groups, spread to the city of Lubumbashi. Here, they excelled, with less competition they recruited from the small gangs and grew immensely, and took over the majority of the city. With this new influx of fighters, they managed to control the situation in the capital, blowing the other groups out of the city within months. Now uncontested, they began exporting to the smaller cities and chasing down the remnants of smaller groups. Then, the Greater Romanian Dictatorship collapsed in the wake of the Moldovan war, and with it came an influx of discarded weaponry and out-of-work soldiers to third-world countries.
Capitalizing on this, and using the leverage he had within the Romanian armed forces, Omari procured massive amounts of weaponry and vehicles, enlisting several former soldiers into his force. He then, using this force, took the city of Bokoro. Facing little to no resistance from the government, they went on the warpath: taking city after city in a chain towards the capital, they finally attracted attention. In their first major battle against the Congolese army, their professional training and new era weaponry led them to a quick and crushing victory. They slew most of their opponents and chased the rest down for over a week. By the end of 1997, they had taken over most of the provinces surrounding the capital and beat back most incursions by the Republic against them.
Everywhere they went, they shared what they could with the locals, offering assistance in farming and construction of infrastructure, raiding the rich plantation owners' homes, and redistributing the wealth. They became the friends of the people.
And then, they committed to assaulting the capital. Using their pre-established network within the city, they lay waste to the support structure of the besieged units there. Water supplies were poisoned, communications jammed, important roads blockaded and light harassment kept them constantly moving about. Then, at midnight in March of 1998, the CPG performed a full-scale assault of the city. Thousands died, and fighting quickly came down to house-to-house warfare, booby traps taking out many of the CPG soldiers. They suffered not only from the opposing side but also from friendly fire due to the lack of an identifiable uniform.
Despite these difficulties, the fighting raged on, and by the latter half of the year and months of combat, the CPG forces had finally captured some more advanced mortars and rocket launchers from the republic. Between July and September, the attacking forces mostly hunkered down, building up defensive positions and bringing up more small-scale artillery. Though the major fighting had slowed, sporadic gunfire was still keeping up at nearly all times in the streets. Thanks to the heavy regulation put on the use of artillery and explosives by both sides, the city remained mostly intact.
Finally, in December of 1998, The CPG forces broke the last government-held stronghold, and the bulk of their remaining armed forces surrendered. For the next half a year, the newly established emperor and his army would campaign through the remote regions of the country, bringing under his control many provinces still controlled by gangs or government holdouts.
In August of 1999, Emperor Omari Gowon finally declared his empire a sovereign state. Still, armed groups existed deep in the Congolese jungle and hidden in gangs in the streets- but that would be dealt with at a later date. The most prominent known organizations are the remainder of the DRCs army, holdouts who still lay claim to the name, as well as the notorious youth gangs that have always plagued the streets of urban cities in Africa.
Now, the Emperor himself, built on a false claim backed by a fallen foreign dictator, rules over the entirety of the country and is tasked with bringing it back from the brink of social, economic, and political disaster. To bring forth the first true superpower of Africa.
His first major breakthrough was when he deposed a major drug trafficking gang in Kinshasa, the capital. Through armed force they slaughtered many of the gang members, taking the rest prisoner and burning their supplies. He continued going through the capital city, a major source for drug trafficking due to corruption and lax restrictions on shipping, breaking up gangs of drug smugglers, and executing the "enemies of the public". Soon more people, some from opposing gangs and some from the general populace, joined up with his own group to help fight the countries corruption. At this point, he adopted a name for his group: The Congolese Peoples Guard. The CPG wreaked havoc within the city criminal hierarchy, in return making it a very large target for other gangs, hired guns, and bribed police officers. They were seeing constant fighting, and the land they controlled would ebb and flow.
They began expanding back into rural areas, and after busting up several other armed groups, spread to the city of Lubumbashi. Here, they excelled, with less competition they recruited from the small gangs and grew immensely, and took over the majority of the city. With this new influx of fighters, they managed to control the situation in the capital, blowing the other groups out of the city within months. Now uncontested, they began exporting to the smaller cities and chasing down the remnants of smaller groups. Then, the Greater Romanian Dictatorship collapsed in the wake of the Moldovan war, and with it came an influx of discarded weaponry and out-of-work soldiers to third-world countries.
Capitalizing on this, and using the leverage he had within the Romanian armed forces, Omari procured massive amounts of weaponry and vehicles, enlisting several former soldiers into his force. He then, using this force, took the city of Bokoro. Facing little to no resistance from the government, they went on the warpath: taking city after city in a chain towards the capital, they finally attracted attention. In their first major battle against the Congolese army, their professional training and new era weaponry led them to a quick and crushing victory. They slew most of their opponents and chased the rest down for over a week. By the end of 1997, they had taken over most of the provinces surrounding the capital and beat back most incursions by the Republic against them.
Everywhere they went, they shared what they could with the locals, offering assistance in farming and construction of infrastructure, raiding the rich plantation owners' homes, and redistributing the wealth. They became the friends of the people.
And then, they committed to assaulting the capital. Using their pre-established network within the city, they lay waste to the support structure of the besieged units there. Water supplies were poisoned, communications jammed, important roads blockaded and light harassment kept them constantly moving about. Then, at midnight in March of 1998, the CPG performed a full-scale assault of the city. Thousands died, and fighting quickly came down to house-to-house warfare, booby traps taking out many of the CPG soldiers. They suffered not only from the opposing side but also from friendly fire due to the lack of an identifiable uniform.
Despite these difficulties, the fighting raged on, and by the latter half of the year and months of combat, the CPG forces had finally captured some more advanced mortars and rocket launchers from the republic. Between July and September, the attacking forces mostly hunkered down, building up defensive positions and bringing up more small-scale artillery. Though the major fighting had slowed, sporadic gunfire was still keeping up at nearly all times in the streets. Thanks to the heavy regulation put on the use of artillery and explosives by both sides, the city remained mostly intact.
Finally, in December of 1998, The CPG forces broke the last government-held stronghold, and the bulk of their remaining armed forces surrendered. For the next half a year, the newly established emperor and his army would campaign through the remote regions of the country, bringing under his control many provinces still controlled by gangs or government holdouts.
In August of 1999, Emperor Omari Gowon finally declared his empire a sovereign state. Still, armed groups existed deep in the Congolese jungle and hidden in gangs in the streets- but that would be dealt with at a later date. The most prominent known organizations are the remainder of the DRCs army, holdouts who still lay claim to the name, as well as the notorious youth gangs that have always plagued the streets of urban cities in Africa.
Now, the Emperor himself, built on a false claim backed by a fallen foreign dictator, rules over the entirety of the country and is tasked with bringing it back from the brink of social, economic, and political disaster. To bring forth the first true superpower of Africa.