Home » Interviews » Democratic Republic of the Congo – Islamists are redrawing the East of the country

Democratic Republic of the Congo – Islamists are redrawing the East of the country

Bishop Paluku Sikuli Melchisédech of the diocese of Butembo-Beni, in the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, has denounced the failure of his government in the face of the challenges confronting it. Terrorists are expelling the indigenous populations from their homes, while criminals are trafficking in the exploitation of Congo’s mineral resources, completely undisturbed.

ACN: Since the beginning of April a wave of demonstrations, some of them violent, have shaken your country, calling for an end to the insecurity. What is your position in regard to these demonstrations?

Bishop Paluku Sikuli Melchisédech: You cannot ask people who are being slaughtered like animals to simply shut up and do nothing. They have every right to demand security, every right to demand freedom. We simply urge that this should be done with respect for the law, peacefully and without violence.

Bishop Paluku Sikuli Melchisédech of the diocese of Butembo-Beni, in the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Bishop Paluku Sikuli Melchisédech of the diocese of Butembo-Beni, in the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

What are they protesting about exactly?

The completely ineffectual nature of the UN peacekeeping mission. But more broadly about the continuing ongoing conflicts, which have never been sorted out and which are continuing in the east of the country. When I became bishop, 20 years ago, people were already talking about the ‘Balkanisation’ of the region. I can only say that the expression still applies today! The national Congolese Bishops’ Conference calculates that there have been over 6,000 people killed in Beni since 2013 and over 2,000 in Bunia in the year 2020 alone. There are also an estimated at least 3 million internal refugees and around 7,500 people who have been kidnapped. There is a grand scheme to Islamise or expel the local populations.

Why do you speak of Islamisation? The main organisation involved, the so-called Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), does not claim to be an Islamist organisation.

All those who have been kidnapped by these terrorist groups and who have escaped alive from them report the same thing. They were given the choice between death and conversion to Islam. They are given Muslim names to cement their identity. Besides, even those who live in the diocese and haven’t gone through this traumatic experience can tell you that mosques are springing up everywhere.

Who is funding them?

In his time Mouammar Kadhafi gave very generously towards the building of these mosques. Now there are other sources of funding that are paying for the construction of these buildings.

As for the funding of the armed terrorist groups, they are engaged in some very lucrative activities. It is plain to see that Islamisation is not their sole motivation! This region abounds with natural resources and they are being exploited completely illegally. How else can you explain those coltan refineries that are operating in Rwanda, when the country has none of this resource? Instead this rare mineral is extracted here in our region and exported quite illegally across the other side of the frontier. And I see no sign of the Congolese government being concerned.

The national Congolese Bishops’ Conference calculates that there have been over 6,000 people killed in Beni since 2013.
The national Congolese Bishops’ Conference calculates that there have been over 6,000 people killed in Beni since 2013.

Are you denouncing a silent complicity on the part of your government?

Either it is weakness, or else it is complicity.

Are you not taking a risk in denouncing the government of Congo in this way?

The Congolese Catholic Church is not concerned in this respect. She has done so much for the construction of the country and she manages so many schools and hospitals! Congo would not be the Congo without the Church. So we are fortunate in being able to speak out quite freely.

Don't miss the latest updates!

Aid worker says people feel “dehumanised” as Lebanon buckles under bombings

Among the priorities is the reopening of schools and paying…

Middle East: Holy Week begins under the sign of the cross

ACN expresses concern over Palm Sunday restrictions in Jerusalem, Syria…

Paschal hope among the ruins in Gaza

Holy Week has begun against a backdrop of persistent war…

Lebanon. “This is not a just war; it is a defeat for us all”

Bishop Jules Boutros, from Lebanon, tells ACN that even though…

War in the Middle East: ACN increases emergency aid to Lebanon

Faced with the recent escalation of the conflict in Lebanon,…

Algeria: Visit of Pope Leo XIV bolsters mission of small, vibrant Church and dialogue with Islam

Pope Leo XIV arrived in Algeria yesterday, 13 April, for a historic visit that shines a spotlight on the small but vibrant local Church and the role of dialogue between...

Aid worker says people feel “dehumanised” as Lebanon buckles under bombings

Among the priorities is the reopening of schools and paying teacher’s salaries, as these play a crucial role in spreading Christian values in the region. People are feeling “scared, angry...

Angola. “We cannot host the ‘Messenger of Peace’ with our hearts full of hate”

As the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to hear the Gospel prepares to receive a visit from Pope Leo XIV, the Church makes a renewed appeal for reconciliation in Angola....