Society Magazine

Congolese Awakening: Paris, December 21st, 2013 [remember Why They Died]

Posted on the 26 December 2013 by Therisingcontinent @Ambrosenz

They made it look like the American civil rights movement of the 60s. At that time, they were people of color marching in many US cities claiming equality of races in the American society.

On Saturday December 21st, 2013 in Paris, they were Congolese. They came from everywhere: United Kingdom, France, Brazil, Canada, Ireland, Nigeria, Russia, Venezuela, Switzerland, Spain, Belgium, Holland, Sweden, etc.

According to certain sources they were between 5,000 and 7,000 people. They were almost all Congolese with only few faces which did look alien to the demographics of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The purpose of the meeting of Paris was to say NO to a concert by the Congolese artist JB Mpiana. However, a few days before, the event had been cancelled by the French authorities preoccupied by security issues.

Understandably, all the people who had planned to attend the Paris meeting were already gearing to the event. Some had already arrived in the French capital before the official cancellation of the concert.

The question any non-informed observer would ask is why a musical concert would be so vigorously controversial. The answer is to be found in the politics of the Congolese government in Kinshasa and the place that music holds in that country.

It appears that the music, because of its significant part in the Congolese society, is used by politicians to distract the population from asking accountability about national critical issues such as persistent war in Eastern Congo, poverty, injustices, lack of essential infrastructures including schools and hospitals.

For the many Congolese who gathered in Paris, the purpose of the public march and meeting was to tell to their government in Kinshasa that it had proven its total incompetence in addressing the challenges faced by their country, and especially the problem of protecting DRC sovereignty.

In the same line of Congolese awakening, on December 23rd, 2013 the French president, Francois Hollande, received the petitioners for an International Criminal Tribunal for the DR Congo.

While Congolese consciousness is getting a significant momentum among citizens of DRC, it is unfortunately at the same period we witness other conflicts emerging across Africa. We observe almost helplessly what is happening in the Central Republic of Africa or South Sudan. Before, it was in Mali, Ivory Coast and Libya.

Can Africans wherever they are across the world or live in these states created by Europeans in Africa see in these different zones of conflicts, potential sources of their additional problems for their ultimate development and seek solutions together? They should feel as much concerned as neighbors are when a house in the neighborhood gets on fire.

Related links:
1. Souvenez-vous pourquoi nous sommes morts…

2. Possibility of an international criminal tribunal court for the Democratic Republic of Congo

3. “Les combattants” from Sweden in Paris: Congo Moko


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