April 10, 2026

Tshisekedi’s Kasaïens clique dresses up tribal hate as “justice”

The trial of former Congolese president Joseph Kabila Kabange on Friday, August 22, 2025, laid bare the Tropical Nazism of Tshisekedi and his ethno-tribalist clique of Baluba Kasaïens lawyers.

Pseudo-lawyers, handpicked from the Congolese ruler’s tribe, recited an indictment devoid of evidence, openly denying the Katangese and Congolese identity of Kabila. This orchestrated display of ethnic hate set the tone for a justice system now weaponised for tribal domination.

Under Tshisekedi, the DRC’s judicial system has become a tool of ethnic persecution, a machine of terror designed to humiliate, criminalise, and eliminate anyone outside the Baluba power circle. The “suspect nationality” [nationalité douteuse] argument, historically wielded against Congolese Rwandophones, was recycled to brand Kabila “foreign to humanity,” echoing the same absurd ideologies of racial purity and exclusion that underpin fascism.

By labelling Kabila a “Rwandan,” the court revealed the lethal logic of tribal favouritism: Katangese, Swahili speakers, and anyone outside the Baluba power circle can be arbitrarily branded “Rwandan” and sentenced to death. In the DRC, Justice now serves one ethnic clique, with Tshisekedi playing the omnipotent Caesar of life and death over other Congolese citizens.

The court’s circus of insults showed the regime’s true ideology: Kabila was condemned as belonging to a “race of animals, beasts, and cannibals,” “unfit for civilisation.” This state-sanctioned hate speech mirrors the same ideology historically used to justify burning and cannibalising Rwandaphones in Eastern Congo.

But, as they say, a fool’s luck never lasts. The Kabila trial has exposed what Tshisekedi and his Baluba Kasaïens clique call a justice system, where law is tribalized, ethnic hatred is codified, and anyone outside their circle can be branded “Rwandan” and condemned at whim.

In the end, restoring peace and coexistence between the different Congolese communities in the DRC is not possible without first establishing federalism: a system that respects all Congolese citizens, decentralizes power, and prevents the Baluba Kasaïens clique from monopolizing life, death, and justice.

Until such reforms are enacted, the DRC will remain a rogue, criminal, and dying state under Tshisekedi and his pot-bellied, gluttonous people at every turn and mediocre who have taken the DRC hostage while blaming everyone but themselves.

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