January 31, 2007 By Linda Bloom
Bishop Ntambo Nkulu Ntanda, a United Methodist bishop in the Democratic Republic
of Congo, has been elected to that country's senate. The
new Senate is expected to be installed Feb. 3. Congo's Parliament has two chambers,
the Senate and the National Assembly. Ntambo, 59, has
been bishop since 1996 and was active in the peace process in his region. He leads
the denomination's North Katanga Area in the Congo and also serves as chancellor
of United Methodist-related Africa University in Mutare, Zimbabwe. In
an e-mail message to United Methodist News Service, Ntambo confirmed his election
by the provincial assembly of Katanga Province but said his main emphasis will
continue to be on his pastoral and episcopal duties. On
Jan. 19, Congolese provincial deputies considered 1,127 candidates for the 108
seats for senator across the country. Four seats were allocated for each of the
25 provincial constituencies, with the remaining eight seats assigned to the city
province of Kinshasa. Each senator has a "five-year renewable mandate," according
to the All Africa news service. The Independent Electoral
Commission certified that the majority of the Senate seats – 58 out of 108 – went
to candidates of the Alliance for the Presidential Majority, a coalition allied
with President Joseph Kabila. The alliance, which won 332 of 500 seats in the
National Assembly, is expected to control both chambers of Parliament. According
to the constitution, Parliament must meet in regular sessions twice a year. The
new U.N. secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon, spoke about the political process in
the Democratic Republic of Congo at a Jan. 27 press conference in Kinshasa. Ban
paid tribute to the success of that country's first multiparty democratic elections
in more than 40 years and said the international community "is committed to supporting
the DRC" in its post-electoral process, All Africa reported. The
United Nations helped organize those elections, which came after a six-year civil
war that claimed an estimated 4 million lives, either by fighting or by hunger
and disease. Kabila, who first became president of the Democratic Republic of
Congo in January 2001 after his father, Laurent Kabila, was assassinated, was
confirmed as that country's first democratically elected president on Nov. 27,
2006. Ntambo's first term as bishop occurred as the civil
war began. In 2004, he moderated a peace conference in North Katanga where 250
fighters committed not to fight again. The peace conference was funded by United
Methodist donations, including a grant from the United Methodist Committee on
Relief. The bishop attended seminary for four years in
Mulungwishi and has a master of divinity degree from Nairobi International School
of Theology in Nairobi, Kenya. He has held various denominational positions in
the Democratic Republic of Congo, which has about a million official church members.
He and his wife, Nshimba Nkulu, have eight children. United
Methodist News Service Linda Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news
writer based in New York. |