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Heineken ends decades-long presence in DRC with brewery stake sale

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Heineken has sold its stake in Bralima, its brewing subsidiary in DRC

The Dutch brewer said on Friday it had sold its shareholding in Brasseries, Limonaderies et Malteries, ​which will take over operations, including production, distribution and ​employees. Financial details were not disclosed.

Bralima was founded in ⁠1923 by Belgian investors and had been majority owned by ​Heineken since 1986.

Heineken will retain ownership of its brands and earn ​revenue through long-term trademark licensing agreements covering Heineken, Primus, Turbo King, Legend and Mutzig.

“This step allows the business to continue under a locally anchored ​model,” Guillaume Duverdier, President of Heineken’s Africa Middle East region, ​said in a statement. “It also reflects our move towards a more asset-light ‌approach ⁠in selected markets.”

The sale follows a turbulent period for Heineken in DRC. In February 2025, Bralima’s brewery and depots in the eastern city of Bukavu were extensively looted after Congolese security forces ​withdrew amid an ​advance by M23 rebels.

In June, Heineken said armed personnel had seized its facilities in Bukavu and Goma and ​it had lost operational control.

In November, Heineken transferred its Bukavu ​brewery ⁠to a separate Mauritius-based buye, retaining a three-year buyback option should conditions stabilise.

Friday’s deal covers the remaining operations, ⁠three breweries ​in Kinshasa, Kisangani and Lubumbashi employing ​approximately 731 people, in areas not directly affected by the eastern conflict.

–Reuters–