Dieudonné Ganga

Dieudonné-Antoine Ganga (born 1946?) is a Congolese political figure and diplomat. He briefly served in the government of Congo-Brazzaville as Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1992.

Information

In 1992, Ganga briefly served in the transitional government headed by André Milongo as Minister of Foreign Affairs.[1] Later, he was later appointed by President Pascal Lissouba as the Congo-Brazzaville's Ambassador to the United States from April 1996[2] to 1997.

After arriving in the United States capital of Washington, DC on 22 April 1996, Ganga presented his credentials to President Bill Clinton on 30 April 1996. As Ambassador, he focused on attracting American investors to Congo.[1] Following the JuneOctober 1997 civil war, in which Lissouba was ousted, Serge Mombouli took over as chargé d'affaires.[3]

He currently resides in the Washington DC area, teaching advanced French classes at the Alliance Francaise in Washington.

gollark: I know. I would make them store encryption keys to validate genes with.
gollark: When replicating, cells would assign themselves a random encryption key, store it in the ribosomes, and HMAC all their genes, of course.
gollark: If I was designing cells, they would have cryptographically signed DNA, for instance.
gollark: I don't think the basic functionality could be made that much better without an overhaul of most things.
gollark: The interfaces could use some work, sure.

References

  1. James Morrison, "Embassy row", The Washington Times, 24 June 1996.
  2. "Diplomatic Representation for Republic of the Congo", US State Department website.
  3. Page on Mombouli Archived 2011-10-03 at the Wayback Machine at The Washington Diplomat website.
Preceded by
Jean-Blaise Kololo
Foreign Minister of the Republic of the Congo
1992
Succeeded by
Benjamin Bounkoulou


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