29 November 2017, The Tablet

DRC's bishops ask Kabila to declare he will not run for president again


The bishops helped broker an agreement that said Kabila would remain in office, but elections would be held before the end of 2017


DRC's bishops ask Kabila to declare he will not run for president again

Democratic Republic of Congo's bishops have asked President Joseph Kabila to contribute to the stability of the country by declaring that he will not be a candidate for the next presidential election.

In a statement on 24 November after a three-day meeting in the capital, the bishops reminded Kabila that he was the "guarantor of the constitution." Although DRC's constitution does not allow Kabila to run for a third term, many people fear he will try to do so.

The bishops also emphasised it was important not to delay elections any longer.

After a flare in political violence late last year, the bishops helped the government and opposition sign a 31 December agreement that said Kabila would remain in office, but elections would be held before the end of 2017. Congo's Independent National Electoral Commission recently announced elections would be held in December 2018.

The bishops urged the electoral commission to reassure the public of its independence and to operate with transparency.

In a 2 November telephone interview from Kinshasa, Bishop Oscar Cantu of Las Cruces, New Mexico, chairman of the US bishops' Committee on International Justice and Peace, said widespread corruption is depleting government coffers.

"Questions being asked here are will Kabila relinquish power, and will the transfer of power be peaceful," Bishop Cantu added.

In their November statement, Congo's bishops reminded citizens that change could not happen without them. The bishops urged people to remain vigilant, actively participate in the electoral process and, if they objected to something, to protest peacefully.

PICTURE: Congolese President Joseph Kabila speaks in 2016 at the United Nations UN headquarters in New York. ©PA


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