Albert Delvaux
Albert Delvaux Mafuta Kizola was a Congolese politician who served as Resident Minister of the Republic of the Congo in Belgium.
Before Congolese independence
Albert Delvaux was born on 8 May 1918 to a Belgian father and a Muyaka mother. In 1959, he became the Secretary General of the weakly organised Parti National du Progrès, a party closely aligned with the Belgian colonisers. He participated in the Belgo-Congolese [Round Table Conference] in January-February 1960 in Brussels as a representative of this party. Every Congolese delegation had a Belgian adviser or Belgian advisers at its disposal. In the case of PNP, this included later List of [foreign ministers of Belgium|Minister of Foreign Affairs] Henri Simonet.After Congolese independence
Delvaux occupied the position of List of ambassadors of the [Democratic Republic of the Congo to Belgium|Resident Minister of Congo in Belgium] in the ephemeral Lumumba Government, the first government of the Congo, which gained its independence from Belgium on 30 June 1960. On 5 September 1960, however, President Joseph Kasa-Vubu dismissed the Lumumba government. According to the Loi fondamentale and based on Belgian constitutional practice, every decision by the President has to be countersigned by a minister. Together with Minister of [Foreign Affairs (Democratic Republic of the Congo)|Minister of Foreign Affairs] Justin Bomboko, Delvaux signed the presidential ordinance dismissing the Lumumba government.With the installment of the new government of Joseph Iléo, Delvaux became the Minister of Work. Later, in the government of Cyrille Adoula, Delvaux was the Minister of Public Works.
After the second coup d'état of Joseph-Désiré Mobutu in 1965, Delvaux held several offices like a People's Commissioner from 1977, and member of the Political Bureau of the state party Mouvement Populaire de la Révolution, where he was the dean of the Bureau. His mandate at the Political Bureau ended on 18 February 1981.
Through the renaming campaign in the framework of Authenticité, Albert Delvaux changed his name to Mafuta Kizola.