Catholics in Africa celebrate Congo Basin as the Earth’s second ‘lung’

Catholics in Africa celebrate Congo Basin as the Earth’s second ‘lung’
A view across the Ruzizi River near Bukavu, Congo, of mountains and Rwanda in 2014. Photo: CNS/Sam Phelps, CRS

NAIROBI (CNS): As they marked the Season of Creation, Catholics in Africa celebrated the Congo Basin as the second “lung” of the earth and called for its protection to fight climate change.

The celebrations took place in an online conference focused on the work of the Ecclesial Network for the Congo River Basin [REBAC], a Catholic network that includes Cameroon, Congo, Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Central African Republic.

“The Congo Basin—a major geographic region rich biodiversity—is very important not only for Africa but the entire world,” Prince Papa, coordinator of the Laudato Si’ Movement in Africa, said. “We must ensure that it is protected because many creatures and creation are dependent on it.”

Speakers during the online conference reiterated the support for indigenous people as custodians of biodiversity, highlighted the twin crises of the loss of biodiversity and climate change and their interconnectedness, and spoke against the rapid deforestation in the Congo Basin. They also called for an end to oil exploration and the protection of Virunga National Park in Congo.

Henri Muhiya Musabate, executive secretary of Congo’s Episcopal Commission on Natural Resources, told the virtual conference that most national budgets in Congo Basin countries are funded through mining, oil and forestry, but that such activities were harming the countries and the people.

“Extractive incomes are not profitable to populations and to the development of countries,” Musabate said.

Most of the countries, according to the official, were in poverty and experienced armed conflicts, with militants sustaining the fights to access the natural resources. He also highlighted the illicit sale of arms, weak governance and forced migration, among other challenges.

The effects of climate change are visible in the Congo Basin, said Musabate, as he highlighted increased floods, droughts, disruption of seasons and rising temperatures.

He said people must learn how to convince countries in the Congo Basin to stop exploiting hydrocarbons to fund their budgets and how to fight hunger by reducing cultivatable areas held by families living in the forests.

Rita Mabyalhat, head of transparency programmes for the Justice and Peace Commission of the Archdiocese of Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo, said several measures have been put in place by governments and international organisations to protect the basin’s wetlands from degradation, drainage and drying up due to human activities and mining

Rita Mabyalhat, head of transparency programmes for the Justice and Peace Commission of the Archdiocese of Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo, said several measures have been put in place by governments and international organisations to protect the basin’s wetlands from degradation, drainage and drying up due to human activities and mining.

Environmental activists participate in a climate protest in the streets of Kinshasa, Congo, in 2019. Photo: CNS/Hereward Holland, Reuters

These include a cross-border agreement between the Republic of Congo and Congo on the importance of good land use and planning infrastructures, and initiatives to speed up conservation measures, restoration and sustainable management of wetlands among others.

But she warned, “Even if the Congolese authorities reaffirm their concern to preserve the places, the growing economic needs of the two Congos and the lack of alternatives for the people of the Congo Basin raise fears of an uncertain future for the wetlands.”

The Season of Creation is an annual ecumenical event during which Christians join to pray and act together for the earth. The theme of this year’s event is A Home for All? Renewing the Oikos of God

The virtual conference is taking place ahead of the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity, scheduled to take place online from October 11 to 15 and in person next spring in Kunming, China; and the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference [COP26], slated to run from October 31 to November 12 in Glasgow, Scotland.

At the meeting in China, world leaders will review the progress on the convention. In Glasgow, countries will announce their plans to meet the goals of the Paris climate agreement. The 2015 accord addresses climate change and its negative impacts.

Catholics in Africa are urging world leaders to tackle the climate change emergency and the biodiversity crisis together. They also want action to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius and a promise that there will be no more biodiversity loss.

“It is our responsibility as Catholics to lift up the voices of the most vulnerable and advocate on their behalf. We must act now,” said a petition released by Laudato Si’ Movement.

___________________________________________________________________________