Christians are beheaded and killed in the Congo
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It is so much the love you feel for God that many have decided to give their lives without fear of death. Nearly three million people have shouted "help" to the international media, located in the Kasai area of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Through Caritas International, a confederation that brings together more than a hundred humanitarian organizations around the world, have declared that more than three million people are going hungry, including 400 thousand children suffering from acute dusnitricion, it is an unfortunate fact since The main source of the problem has been the presidential mandate that attempts against the Christian church.
The Congo is being the protagonist of a true civil war and Christians have become the preferred preferential target since the church went to demand democracy in the country. About 1.5 million Congolese fled the country last year, after that President Joseph Kabila refused to leave office at the end of his term in December 2016.
This dituation that they are living has been particularly difficult for the children who are forced and forced by the militias to take up arms and shed blood forcing them without measure to leave aside that innocence that characterizes them and filling their hearts with hatred and evil.
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There are several accounts of the "terrible situation" of the Congolese Christians, many being persecuted by the military forces because of their demonstrations calling for free and fair elections in the country.
With a Catholic majority, many political issues in the Congo go through the hands of the bishops. Catholic churches had been promoting peaceful protests, but on the first day of the year, police invaded temples, threw tear gas bombs and arrested priests.
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There are stories of Christians being executed in the streets, and hanged while kneeling, singing hymns and making prayers. they are going through times that were prophesied in the bible.
"They lost absolutely everything," said Juliette Maquart, of Caritas, about the refugees. "Their houses no longer exist, they were looted and burned, along with hospitals and schools."
"Now I only have two children, of five I had, what I'm going to do now? I feel a lot of sadness in my soul" said the Christian Denise Ndekenya widow who shares her tragedy explaining that most of her family was murdered and her husband was beheaded later that the militia attacked his village last year.
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