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Kinshasa’s archbishop, a government critic, steps down

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Cardinal Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya, Archbishop of Kinshasa, hands out Communion bread during a Catholic mass in Kinshasa on September 21, 2016 to mourn the victims of the violent clashes of the last few days.
Two days of violence in Kinshasa left over 100 people dead, the Democratic Republic of Congo opposition said on September 21, their figure more than tripling the police toll. Police in DR Congo said earlier that 32 people had been killed during the clashes in the capital on Monday and Tuesday, as security forces brought a wave of violence and looting to an end. / AFP / EDUARDO SOTERAS

Laurent Monsengwo, archbishop of Kinshasa and a vocal government critic, has stepped down, the church said on Thursday, just weeks before key elections to replace President Joseph Kabila.

The 79-year-old Monsengwo passed the baton to Fridolin Ambongo, who will take over as de facto leader of the Democratic Republic of Congo’s powerful Catholic Church.

“Pope Francis today accepted the resignation of cardinal Laurent Monsengwo,” Kinshasa archdiocese spokesperson Bruno Lusongakio told AFP, adding that “Fridolin Ambongo has taken over the reins.”

Monsengwo is a harsh critic of the violence that has plagued his country for decades, including successive civil wars that killed millions.

In January, the archbishop placed himself on a potential collision course with those in power over a New Year’s Eve crackdown on Catholic demonstrators demanding an end to Kabila’s presidency.

“We can only denounce, condemn and stigmatise the behaviour of our supposedly courageous men in uniform, who, sadly… are channelling barbarism,” Monsengwo said at the time.

Kabila has been in power since 2001, at the helm of a regime widely criticised for corruption, repression, and incompetence.

His constitutional term in office expired in December 2016, but the church brokered a deal seeking to avert a bloodbath by allowing Kabila to stay in office provided elections to replace him were held in 2017.

Kabila has bowed to international pressure to step aside and the vote will finally be held on December 23.

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