LEADING IN AFRICACoordinated by Sr. Grace Candiru MSMMC
DR Congo
president admits vote ‘mistakes’
Democratic
Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila Between His
Wife (left) and Mother at a
campaign rally
The president of the Democratic Republic of
Congo has conceded there were “mistakes” in elections,
but rejected the finding of the Carter Center international
observer group that the results lacked credibility.
Joseph Kabila, who won re-election in the ballot
held on November 28, said the credibility of the elections was
not in doubt.
“Were there mistakes? Definitely, but
[the US-based Carter Center] has definitely gone far beyond
what was expected,” Kabila told a news conference in the
capital Kinshasa.
Results released by the election commission
showed Kabila won the vote with 49 per cent while Etienne Tshisekedi,
the opposition leader and his main challenger, took 32 per cent
of the nearly 19 million votes cast.
The ballot, marred by deadly violence, was
the second since the country’s 1998-2003 civil war ended.
The first election was held in 2006.
But the outcome was immediately rejected as
fraudulent by Tshisekedi, with the Carter Center citing “impossibly
high” turnout in Kabila strongholds and uncounted ballots
in opposition bastions. It said the organisation of the ballot
cast doubt on the reliability of the results.
“Something like 21 people have been reported
dead. We’ve seen images of thousands of people fleeing
the capital Kinshasa, and we’ve seen running battles between
security forces and protesters,” she said.
“But what tipped the scale for the president
was the report by the Carter Center ... that the election lacked
credibility.”
Kabila, who came to power in 2001 after the
assassination of his father Laurent, pointed to his own
disappointing scores in the eastern provinces of North and South
Kivu as proof that the election process had been transparent.
He said Tshisekedi’s selfdeclaration
as poll winner was not a surprise. “Am I uncomfortable
with the results? Definitely not ... We wanted to score better
in some provinces, especially in North and South Kivu. So we
lost some and we won some,” he said.
“We don’t have a crisis in this
country ... We’re going to stay calm and continue with
the day-to-day activities of the state,” he said, reaffirming
his confidence that the economy will see double-digit growth
in the next two to three years.
Kabila’s comments came as the Catholic
archbishop of Kinshasa criticised the results of the election.
“The results announced by the CENI [Independent
National Electoral Commission] on December 9 comply with neither
truth nor justice,” Cardinal Laurent Monsengwo told journalists.
Monsengwo appealed to Tshisekedi and the other
10 defeated presidential candidates to take their grievances
to the supreme court, a move Tshisekedi has rejected.
He called on the court, which is charged with
hearing election disputes and declaring the official winner
on December 17, to act impartially.
More news:
>> USA
to use Foreign Aid To Fight For Gay Rights
>> Israel Moves to
Curb African Migrants >> Libyan
Army Clashes With Militia in Tripoli >> Gambian
Will Lead Prosecution in Hague
Notice to all our
subscribers. If you get your personal copy of Leadership directly
from the Editor, you can find out whether you have an outstanding
balance, OB, to pay from your address label. If you have any
queries, please do contact us.