Monday, 16 July 2012

Kinshasa cracks down on anti-rwandophone rhetoric in the media

Congolese media and political parties calling for "general

mobilization" against "Rwandan aggression" are discovering that they

could be treading a thin line between patriotic calls and xenophobic

incitements.





And the Congolese government is cracking down on those crossing that fine line.





Two weeks ago, the Kinshasa tabloid "La Presse" was suspended for

printing an op-ed that called for the Congolese to hunt down Rwandans.





DRC Media Minister warned that while the Rwandan government actions

might be objectionable, those actions had nothing to do with Rwandan

citizens or Congolese Rwandophones.





On Wednesday, July 11, Mende suspended the CEO of the state-owned

radio and TV channel RTNC, Christophe Kolomoni Jibu, for having

allowed the live broadcast of a rally held in Kinshasa by the youth

wing of the PPRD at which "xenophobic statements" were made.





Mende said those statements bordered on violations of the 1966 law

against "incitements to ethnic and tribal hatred."





The youth wing of the PPRD were claiming they were poised to storm

residences of "M23 collaborators in Kinshasa."





Those statements were so worrisome that a delegation of the Kinshasa

Rwandophone community, led by former DRC Vice-President Azarias

Ruberwa (photo above), went to meet on the same Wednesday with

Interior Minister Richard Muyej to voice their concerns. Kinshasa

Governor André Kimbuta also attended the meeting.





Interior Minister Muyej assured Ruberwa that the government will

protect his community and warned those attempting to endanger the

"ethnic mosaic" of the DRC that they will feel the full brunt of the

law.





***





PHOTO: From left to right, on the foreground: Gov André Kimbuta,

Interior Minister Muyej & Azarias Ruberwa





PHOTO CREDITS: digitalcongo.net

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