Monday, 5 January 2026

Hate Speech in the DRC: A Refrain Without Music

A Legal and Political Reading for an International Audience (EU, USA, Global Media)

In recent years, "hate speech" has become a central term in diplomatic statements, UN briefings, and international media coverage concerning the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Democratic Republic of the Congo). It is repeated with insistence, often presented as a principal driver of violence in the eastern part of the country. Yet, detached from context, this narrative risks becoming a refrain without music: loud, repetitive, and ultimately misleading.

For international audiences—particularly in the European Union and the United States—this framing demands careful scrutiny. Under international law, political speech, even when angry or accusatory, does not automatically constitute hate speech. More importantly, the systematic focus on language rather than violence risks obscuring the primary legal reality: the DRC is the victim of prolonged armed aggression, massive human rights violations, and violations of its sovereignty.

International Law: Clear Standards, Selective Application

International legal instruments are precise on what constitutes hate speech. Article 20(2) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) prohibits advocacy of national, racial, or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination, hostility, or violence. Criticism of a government, an army, or a foreign policy—even when forceful—does not meet this threshold.

Equally important, Article 51 of the UN Charter affirms the inherent right of states to self-defence in the event of armed attack. Numerous UN documents acknowledge that the eastern DRC has suffered external interference and support to armed groups, notably the M23 rebellion. This is not a matter of opinion, but of record.

The UN Group of Experts on the DRC, reporting to the United Nations Security Council, has repeatedly documented external military support to armed groups operating in North Kivu. These findings place the conflict squarely within the framework of international armed conflict by proxy, triggering obligations under international humanitarian law.

In this legal context, portraying Congolese denunciations of violence as "hate speech" risks mischaracterising legitimate political expression and lawful grievance.

UN Mapping Report: The Missing Reference

Any serious discussion of speech and violence in the DRC must acknowledge the UN Mapping Report (2010), which documents grave violations of international human rights and humanitarian law committed between 1993 and 2003. The report identifies acts that, if proven before a competent court, could constitute crimes against humanity or even genocide.

The Mapping Report remains largely unimplemented. No international tribunal has been established, and accountability remains absent. This failure has legal and psychological consequences. Under international justice theory, impunity perpetuates conflict and delegitimises calls for restraint directed solely at victims.

Asking Congolese communities—many of whom are survivors of documented mass atrocities—to moderate their language while justice remains denied is not conflict prevention; it is conflict mismanagement.

Rwanda, Identity, and Legal Responsibility

The role of Rwanda  is central to international debates. The Rwandan government has increasingly framed criticism of its regional actions as "anti-Tutsi hate speech." This conflation is legally and politically problematic.

Under international law, states are responsible for their actions, not ethnic groups. The principle of individual criminal responsibility—central to international criminal law—explicitly rejects collective guilt. When a state presents itself as the protector and representative of an ethnic group beyond its borders, it risks instrumentalising identity in violation of both non-intervention principles and minority protection norms.

Tutsi communities in the DRC are Congolese citizens. Their rights are protected under Congolese law and international human rights treaties. Militarising their identity through external intervention undermines their safety and violates the very principles of minority protection invoked in their name.

Speech Versus Silence: A False Moral Hierarchy

International actors often urge "de-escalation of rhetoric" without equally forceful demands for:

  • withdrawal of external forces,

  • cessation of support to armed groups,

  • accountability for war crimes,

  • and protection of civilians.

This imbalance creates a false moral hierarchy in which speech is policed more aggressively than violence. From a legal perspective, this is indefensible. International humanitarian law prioritises the protection of civilians, not the management of narratives.

The United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the DRC (MONUSCO) operates under a mandate precisely because the situation constitutes a threat to international peace and security. The problem is not Congolese speech; it is the persistence of armed violence and impunity.

For EU and US Policymakers: Strategic Clarity Needed

For the European Union and the United States—both of whom publicly support a rules-based international order—the DRC represents a test case. Selective outrage undermines credibility. Strategic minerals, regional alliances, and diplomatic convenience must not override legal consistency.

If international partners wish to combat hate speech genuinely, they must:

  1. Distinguish clearly between incitement and political critique.

  2. Anchor discourse in verified UN findings, not abstract narratives.

  3. Support accountability mechanisms, including hybrid or international tribunals.

  4. Address the economic drivers of conflict, including illicit mineral exploitation.

Without these steps, the rhetoric of hate speech risks becoming a tool of silencing rather than protection.

Conclusion: Justice First, Language Second

The Congolese people are not asking for the right to hate. They are asking for the right to live in security, dignity, and sovereignty. International law supports them. UN reports substantiate their claims. What is missing is not moderation of speech, but courage in enforcement.

Until aggression ends, accountability begins, and justice becomes tangible, the repeated invocation of "hate speech" in the DRC will remain what it is today:
a refrain without music—loud, hollow, and profoundly unjust.

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