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Five things to know about DR Congo

By AFP
Congo The DRC is one of the world's biggest suppliers of cobalt, a crucial raw ingredient in batteries.  By SAMIR TOUNSI AFPFile
JAN 26, 2023 LISTEN
The DRC is one of the world's biggest suppliers of cobalt, a crucial raw ingredient in batteries. By SAMIR TOUNSI (AFP/File)

Pope Francis is expected to visit the Democratic Republic of Congo, Africa's largest predominantly Catholic country, next Tuesday.

Here are five things to know about this vast nation:

Mineral wealth, dire poverty

The DRC is awash with minerals and precious stones, from gold, diamonds and coltan to tin, copper and cobalt.

Harbouring the Congo River -- the second-largest in Africa after the Nile -- the DRC also has huge hydroelectric potential, as well as 80 million hectares (197 million acres) of arable land.

But decades of war and chronic mismanagement means that little of the country's enormous wealth trickles down to the population of some 100 million people.

About two thirds of the Congolese population survive on under $2.15 a day, according to the World Bank.

Ethnic mosaic

Occupying a vast area the size of continental western Europe, the DRC is about 80 times larger than its former colonial master, Belgium.

It is the second-largest state in Africa after Algeria.

Three Congolese on a motorbike head to a graveyard for Ebola victims in North Kivu province in 2018.  By John WESSELS AFPFile Three Congolese on a motorbike head to a graveyard for Ebola victims in North Kivu province in 2018. By John WESSELS (AFP/File)

Some 250 different ethnic groups live in the DRC, speaking hundreds of different languages.

French is the country's official language, and local tongues Kikongo, Lingala, Tshiluba and Swahili are also officially recognised.

Despite its size and diversity -- the former province of Katanga tried to secede in the 1960s -- there is a fierce sense of national unity.

Troubled east

Children who fled violence last June in eastern DRC's North Kivu province cast a shadow as they play on swings at a camp in Kisoro in neighbouring Uganda.  By BADRU KATUMBA AFPFile Children who fled violence last June in eastern DRC's North Kivu province cast a shadow as they play on swings at a camp in Kisoro in neighbouring Uganda. By BADRU KATUMBA (AFP/File)

The DRC has been ravaged by brutal conflicts in recent decades. The first Congo war, between 1996-1997, resulted in the overthrow of dictator Mobutu Sese Seko.

The second Congo war, between 1998-2003, sucked in nine different countries, involved about 30 armed groups and caused millions of deaths according to some estimates. It also bankrupted the country.

Most of the DRC is now at peace, but its mineral-rich eastern provinces remain plagued by dozens of armed groups and civilian massacres are common.

Secular, religious

Secularism has been enshrined in the Congolese Constitution since 1974, which also recognises freedom of worship.

DR Congo.  By  AFP DR Congo. By (AFP)

According to estimates, about 40 percent of the country is Catholic, 35 percent Protestants of various denominations, nine percent Muslims and 10 percent Kimbanguists -- a Christian movement born in the Belgian Congo.

Official Vatican statistics put the proportion of Catholics in the DRC at 49 percent of the population.

Atheists are exceedingly rare in Congolese society, which remains deeply religious and influenced by the church. During the colonial period, education was entrusted to Catholic missionaries.

Rumba, survival

Clothes make the man: Congo's 'sapeurs'.  By Junior D. Kannah AFPFile Clothes make the man: Congo's 'sapeurs'. By Junior D. Kannah (AFP/File)

Congolese people are renowned for their sense of humour and resourcefulness in the face of trying conditions.

Many jokingly refer to "Article 15" of the constitution, which purports to instruct citizens to sort things out themselves.

Music also plays an outsize role in the country's culture. UNESCO listed Congolese rumba as intangible cultural heritage of humanity in December 2021.

Congo is also famed for its so-called sapeurs -- dandies known for their ultra-elegant clothing and sense of style.

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