Since July, more than 140 people have been killed in the intercommunal violence between the Yaka and Teke communities, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has reported about a conflict that was reportedly sparked by a dispute over customary land taxes.
Members of the Teke community consider themselves the original inhabitants of villages spread over 200 kilometers along the Congo River.
In his October 12 homily, the Local Ordinary of Kinshasa Archdiocese highlighted the importance of unity among the people of the two warring communities.
He said, “Dear brothers, there should be no stranger among us because we are all brothers, sons and daughters of the same Father from whom we have life, being and movement.”
The member of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin (OFM Cap) further said, “The goods and riches of this world, the land that God has entrusted to us simply for administration, must not divide us or set us against each other.”
“If we are not careful, if we do not turn to the Lord so that he can transform us, to see in the other not an enemy to be slaughtered but a brother, tomorrow we will all be swept away in the torrent of wickedness that (has) started the territory of Kwamouth,” he said.
The Cardinal who has been at the helm of Kinshasa Archdiocese since November 2018 added, “Not only the territory of Bagata, but tomorrow the whole city of Kinshasa will be swept away by this group of uncontrollable armed bandits.”
Cardinal Ambongo urged the people of God in Kwamouth territory “not to give in to fear” but to remain firm in their faith for “God is with you always.”
On September 6, the Local Ordinary of Kenge Diocese appealed for peace and reconciliation following violent clashes between the Yaka and Teke communities.
“The contribution of the Church is inevitably the invitation to peace, to reconciliation and the invitation to return to fraternity,” Bishop Jean-Pierre Kwambamba Masi told journalists.
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October 15, 2022 at 12:26PM
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“Absence of state authority” Behind Persistent Inter-tribal Conflict in DR Congo: Cardinal - ACI Africa
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