Democratic Republic of the Congo's President Felix-Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo (right) applauds as Pope Francis delivers a speech in the garden of the Palace of the Nation during the meeting of the authorities, the civil society and the diplomatic corps in Gombe, Kinshasa on January 31, 2023.
Summary
·
It is the
first time since 1985 that a pope has visited the DRC, where about 40 percent
of whom are Catholic.
· Eastern Congo has also seen a wave of deadly attacks blamed on the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), a group the Islamic State claims as an affiliate, including a bomb blast at a Pentecostal church this month that killed 14 people.
Pope Francis arrived in the
Democratic Republic of Congo on Tuesday, denouncing "economic
colonialism" that he said had plundered the resources of the mineral-rich
and conflict-torn nation.
Massive crowds thronged Kinshasa for
a glimpse of the popemobile, cheering and waving flags as the 86-year-old
pontiff made his way from the airport to the presidential palace.
On his fifth trip to Africa, Pope
Francis, 86, is bringing a message of peace to the Democratic Republic of Congo
and neighbouring South Sudan, both wracked by decades of stubborn conflict.
In a speech at the presidential
palace, the pope received applause as he touched on the country's "history
of foreign domination."
He said that "political
exploitation gave way to an economic colonialism that was equally
enslaving" in the DRC.
"As a result, this country,
massively plundered, has not benefited adequately from its immense
resources," he told an audience of Congolese politicians and other
dignitaries, speaking in Italian.
"Hands off the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, hands off Africa," he said. "It is not a mine
to be stripped or a terrain to be plundered".
The message will resonate well in
the DRC, a country of about 100 million people, which won independence from
Belgium in 1960.
Despite its vast mineral reserves of
minerals, the DRC remains one of the poorest countries in the world.
About two-thirds of the population
lives on less than $2.15 a day, according to the World Bank.
It is the first time since 1985 that
a pope has visited the DRC, where about 40 percent of whom are Catholic.
'Bloodshed'
The six-day trip to DRC and South Sudan had been planned for July 2022, but
postponed due to the pontiff's knee pain that has forced him in recent months
to use a wheelchair.
He boarded and disembarked the plane
via an elevator.
Security concerns were also said to
play a role in delaying the trip, and a stop in the DRC's east, where dozens of
armed groups operate, is no longer on the itinerary.
M23 rebels -- allegedly backed by
the DRC's smaller neighbour Rwanda -- have captured swathes of territory in
eastern Congo since late 2021, coming within miles (kilometres) of Goma, a
commercial hub of over one million people.
"I would have liked to go to
Goma too, but with the war, you can't go there," the pope told reporters
on the plane.
At the presidential palace, Francis
also urged that more attention be paid to the conflict.
"We cannot grow accustomed to
the bloodshed that has marked this country for decades, causing millions of
deaths that remain mostly unknown elsewhere," he said.
The pope added that he supported
ongoing regional peace efforts.
Eastern Congo has also seen a wave
of deadly attacks blamed on the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), a group the
Islamic State claims as an affiliate, including a bomb blast at a Pentecostal
church this month that killed 14 people.
Million-strong mass
President Felix Tshisekedi also gave a speech condemning the conflict, which he
accused Rwandan of fomenting.
"Foreign powers greedy for the
minerals contained in our subsoil commit cruel atrocities with the direct and
cowardly support of our neighbour, Rwanda, thus making security the
government's first and greatest challenge," the 59-year-old said.
The DRC is scheduled to hold a
presidential election on December 20, in Tshisekedi has declared he will stand
for a second term in office. The president originally came to power after a
strongly disputed election in 2018.
Francis, in his speech, underlined
the importance of "free, transparent and credible elections."
"May no-one be manipulated,
much less bought, by those who would foment violence in the country, and
exploit it in order to make shameful business deals," he said.
Tens of thousands of people are
expected to attend a prayer vigil on Tuesday evening at Kinshasa's N'dolo
airport ahead of a mass on Wednesday morning, which is tipped to draw more than
a million faithful.
Pilgrimage of peace
On Friday, Francis will travel to Juba, the capital of South Sudan, also one of
the world's poorest countries, that has lurched from one crisis to another
since gaining independence in 2011.
It suffered a brutal five-year civil
war, while continued conflict between rival ethnic groups exacts a terrible
toll on civilians.
The pope will be joined in Juba by
the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, and the leader of the Church of
Scotland, on what he has called "an ecumenical pilgrimage of peace".
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