Every citizen deserves to live in a state of law and every country has the obligation to apply its laws in a fair and efficient manner as much towards its citizens as towards its own leaders. The lawyer must be considered as the salt of justice and the light of the judicial world in a land that is the cradle of humanity, a land that nurtures peoples and a land that is home to multidimensional communities in search of balance. The lawyer is the landmark of all these communities that are moving, pushing each other, crashing and/or overlapping, but evolving, unbalanced and fearful of their disappearance, in a constant movement of interdependence and mutual physical and cultural destabilization. It is the light for those who fear a savage struggle for life and the reason of the strongest; it is the rampart for those who fear the law of retaliation and the government of judges. Without a truly independent justice in Congo-Kinshasa, it is impossible if not difficult that the DemocraticRepublic of Congo my country is counted among the democratic countries, moreover A STATE OF LAW.