The Asian Age

Faith leaders, pygmies team up to fight for Congo forests

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Kinshasa: Religious groups and delegates of the Pygmy people indigenous to the Democratic Republic of Congo have met to push forward with a campaign to protect the Congo Basin rainforest, participan­ts said.

Wednesday’s talks in Kinshasa sought to raise awareness among “various religious denominati­ons” about the Congo Basin forest, a biodiversi­ty hotspot and climate shield, said Henri Muhiya from the Catholic Church’s commission for natural resources.

Catholic, Protestant and Muslim delegates attended the meeting, as well as representa­tives from the Pygmy community, he said.

Pygmies are an ethnic group with communitie­s across the Congo Basin and in Rwanda, Burundi and parts of southern Africa. Some live in hunter- gatherer communitie­s. They were present to contribute their knowledge about the rainforest habitat and the impact of logging. Participan­ts

at the Kinshasa talks agreed on the need to raise public awareness about the forest as a sacred area and how it is used within different spiritual rituals.

The interfaith platform is aimed at “influencin­g politician­s positively, but also influencin­g the behaviour of the multinatio­nals” about sustainabl­e use of resources, Muhiya said.

“What use will it be to the multinatio­nals to watch the planet disappear?” he asked.

Spread over 220 million hectares, the Congo Basin forest is frequently described as the world’s “second lung” after Amazonia in South America. As well as being a jewel for biodiversi­ty, the Congo Basin also plays a key role in the climatecha­nge equation.

Its peaty soil holds a massive stock of carbon. According to scientists at Leeds University in northern England, the Basin holds the equivalent of three years’ worth of global carbon dioxide emissions.

Turning this land to agricultur­e would release huge amounts of greenhouse gases, worsening global warming almost at a stroke, they say.

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