December 4, 2022
1 min read

Religious leaders meet in eastern DRC

On Friday, DRC president Felix Tshisekedi declared three days of national mourning following the violence…reports Asian Lite News

Religious leaders met on Saturday in Goma following the violence that resulted in at least 50 deaths in eastern DRC.

On Thursday, the military accused the M23 rebel movement of the deaths and breaching a recently brokered ceasefire.

“Our effective commitment to the inter-faith project for peace in North Kivu, our support for the authorities of the province in their efforts to seek peace and the peaceful coexistence of communities, our appeal to all of the faithful, in particular the population in general, to get involved in the promotion of peace. Our determination to say each week in our parishes and mosques a common prayer on the ecumenical peace of the French saint of Assisi”, said Rev. Samuel Ngahiembako, President of the ECC (L’Eglise du Christ au Congo: Church of Christ in Congo, Ed.)

On Friday, DRC president Felix Tshisekedi declared three days of national mourning following the violence.

Local resident Amani Fundiko, added “I have so many worries because we have no peace, no joy to see our compatriots being killed in Rutshuru, Runyonyi, Rugari, everywhere there, our wish is that the President takes decisions to take charge of this situation and see if they can put an end to the M23, even look at the Goma-Rutshuru road, it is blocked. The situation is very complicated and we are hungry”, he said.

The M23 rebel movement re-emerged last year in November claiming the government had not stuck to the terms of the peace deal.

ALSO READ: UK, South Africa to tackle climate change

Previous Story

Indian-origin part of Canadian team to recruit nurses from Karnataka

Next Story

Why is a rich country like the UK facing food insecurity?

Latest from Africa News

Taiwan Mulls Chip Curbs on South Africa

Although Taiwan is not a major chip supplier to South Africa, it plays a dominant role in global semiconductor production, and even limited restrictions may serve as a diplomatic warning. Taiwan’s Ministry

Aboulela awarded PEN Pinter prize

Born to an Egyptian mother and Sudanese father, Aboulela grew up in a Khartoum where British colonial echoes mingled with the call to prayer Sudanese-British novelist Leila Aboulela has been named winner

India seeks cooperation with Africa

Addressing the Joint Session of the Namibian Parliament, Modi noted that India’s development partnership in Africa is worth more than $12 billion …reports Asian Lite News Hailing the relations between India and Africa,

India, Namibia Ink health, entrepreneurship MOUs

The African nation is the first country to enter into a licensing agreement to adopt UPI technology…reports Asian Lite News Following their discussions on further strengthening bilateral ties, Prime Minister Narendra Modi
Go toTop

Don't Miss

‘Tanzania is India’s largest African partner’

Jaishankar informed the audience that the heart of India and

African Countries Becoming Wary of Chinese Investments

There is a flurry of cancellations and reviews of Chinese