NOBEL peace laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu was in the Democratic Republic of Congo on Friday to discuss efforts to end the country’s war. ”We have been praying for this wonderful country to have peace and the people of this beautiful country to live together as people who are reconciled, who are united,” Tutu told state television after his arrival on Thursday. ”Everyone must say ‘I will work for peace, I will change my enemy into a friend’,” added Tutu, who won the Nobel peace prize for his crusade against apartheid in South Africa. Warring DRC parties have agreed a peace deal to end Congo’s war, which since 1998 has pitted rebels backed by Rwanda and Uganda against the Kinshasa government and troops from Zimbabwe, Angola and Namibia. Tutu was to meet President Joseph Kabila and other political figures on Friday during a three-day visit at Kabila’s invitation to celebrate Tutu’s 25 years as an Anglican archbishop, independent media reports said. – Reuters