The Democratic Republic of Congo seemed poised yesterday to announce the results of presidential elections whose repeated delays have stoked fears for the giant country’s stability.
The election’s supervisors — facing mounting pressure at home and abroad — signalled that the keenly awaited results would be unveiled later in the day.
“Publication of provisional results from presidential elections, Wednesday January 9,” said a large banner placed in the press room of the Independent National Election Commission (CENI).
Vast, poor and burdened by a history of bloodshed, the DRC is in the grip of a two-year-old crisis over the succession of President Joseph Kabila.
Kabila, 47, was due to step down two years ago but clung to office, sparking widespread protests that were repressed at the cost of scores of lives.
The elections were held on December 30, but CENI last weekend said provisional results, expected on Sunday, would be held up because of logistical problems.
On Tuesday, Nangaa told AFP his panel hoped to complete the count within “24 to 48 hours” and then set a time for announcing the results.
The long delay sparked blunt warnings from inside and outside the DRC, but also coincided with an apparent overture to Kabila from opposition leaders.
According to the initial timetable, after provisional results are released, definitive results are due on January 15 with the swearing-in of the new president three days later.
After deploying tens of thousands of its own election observers, the powerful Catholic Church last week said it knew the outcome of the ballot and called on the authorities to reveal the result “in keeping with truth and justice”.
Campaign groups yesterday called for the immediate release of the results and told people “to be prepared to go out onto the streets in massive numbers” if the outcome failed to accurately reflect the vote.
“Results contrary to the truth of the ballot box will be considered as a constitutional coup,” said a joint statement from the groups, which include Lucha (Struggle for Change) and Filimbi.
South Africa and Zambia, DRC’s neighbour to the south, joined the clamour to publish the results.
“The delay in releasing the results of the elections can lead to suspicions and compromise peace and stability of the country,” South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and Zambian counterpart Edgar Lungu said in a joint statement.
The turmoil surrounding the election revived traumatic memories of the DRC’s brutal past.
The mineral-rich country has never had a peaceful transition of power since it gained independence from Belgium in 1960.
Bloody clashes marred elections in 2006 and 2011, and two wars between 1996 and 2003, drawing in armies from around the region, claimed millions of lives.
After Kabila last year announced he would step down after 18 years in power, he hand-picked a loyalist, former interior minister Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary, as his party’s candidate.
The choice fuelled accusations that Kabila — concerned about possible retribution — would use Shadary to protect his interests after the vote.
But on Tuesday, the opposition hinted at a rapprochement. “There’s no spirit of revenge,” said Felix Tshisekedi, the candidate of the longtime opposition UDPS party.
He also told the Belgian newspaper Le Soir that Kabila could be honoured for ushering in a peaceful transition.
“One day we will even have to think of paying tribute to him (Kabila) for agreeing to withdraw,” Tshisekedi said in an interview.
Related Story