Congo archbishop calls for peace amid tension over delayed vote
As most of the world celebrates Christmas, people in the Democratic Republic of Congo are an anxious lot.
After several failed attempts, the country was expected to hold a presidential election December 23 but was cancelled amid logistical and security concerns.
With the election poised to take place on Sunday December 30, people in Congo have little to smile about with growing concerns of violence during the highly volatile wait for the poll.
An appeal for peace during Congo’s tense, volatile election period was issued at a Christmas Eve midnight mass in Kinshasa.
The newly appointed Archbishop Fridolin Ambongo on Christmas Eve made a passionate appeal for peace.
He called on President Joseph Kabila’s government to ensure there are no further delays to the election while urging citizens to remain calm.
Cheers greeted his homily at the Notre Dame Cathedral of Kinshasa.
“The real peace excludes egoism, regionalism, tribalism, division and categorization that pushed us apart,” said Ambongo.
“In this critical period in the history of our country, I invite each of you to have a sense of responsibility, and to embrace nonviolence, so we may make it through December 30th 2018 that elections happen in peace and truth.”
Congo’s Catholic church has a been a longtime supporter of democracy in the country and has urged Kabila to hold elections, which have been postponed for two years.
The church has been a key player in negotiations after Kabila refused to step down at the end of his mandate in 2016.
“Real peace, today in our country, the peace that comes from Jesus Christ, that peace requires that the elections are held on schedule, on the 30th of December 2018,” said Ambongo.
“Real peace … is a peace that also calls for the results when they are announced to reflect the real will of the people,” he said.