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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

‘Doubts’ persist as region backs Tshisekedi as DRC president

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KINSHASA: Regional powers hailed Felix Tshisekedi on Sunday as DR Congo’s incoming president despite claims by his opponents of an election stitch-up and the EU and African Union warning of doubts over the result.


Announcing the final results of the much-delayed poll, the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Constitutional Court threw out a challenge by runner-up Martin Fayulu in an overnight declaration.


It declared Tshisekedi the winner, paving the way for him to take over from the country’s longtime leader Joseph Kabila, 47.


The election dispute has raised fears of fresh bloodshed in the vast and volatile central African nation.


An EU spokeswoman pleaded for all sides to refrain from “any action that could lead to violence.’’


“As expressed by the AU (African Union) high level consultative meeting on Thursday in Addis, doubts remain regarding the conformity of the result,” she added.


The chairman of the African Union (AU), Rwandan President Paul Kagame, was due in Kinshasa on Monday after the AU questioned the election results.


But the 16-nation Southern African Development Community congratulated Tshisekedi on Sunday for being declared president-elect and called for a peaceful handover of power.


“The SADC reiterates the need to respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the DRC,” its chairman Hage Geingob, president of Namibia, said in a statement.


“SADC calls upon all Congolese to accept the outcome, consolidate democracy and maintain a peaceful and stable environment.” Hundreds of Tshisekedi’s supporters celebrated by blowing whistles and horns near his party headquarters in the capital Kinshasa, where the atmosphere was otherwise calm on Sunday.




FAYULU ALLEGES ‘COUP’


Fayulu has described the outcome of the vote as an “electoral coup.’’


He called for peaceful protests, though no major incidents were reported across the country on Sunday.


Fayulu has alleged that Tshisekedi promised to protect Kabila’s political and financial interests in return for helping to ensure his victory.


“I ask the entire international community not to recognise a power that has neither legitimacy nor legal standing to represent the Congolese people,” he said of Tshisekedi.


The winning candidate called for unity. “This is not a victory for one side or the other,” Tshisekedi said in a video message.


“The Congo we are going to build will not be a Congo of division, hate and tribalism — it will be a Congo that is reconciled, a strong Congo, looking towards development, peace and security for all.”




Recount call rejected


Tshisekedi’s victory was provisionally announced earlier this month by the Independent National Election Commission (CENI) but it was challenged both at home and abroad.


On Sunday, the Constitutional Court, which is made up of Kabila’s allies, said Fayulu had failed to prove any inaccuracies in the figures. It described his call for a recount as “absurd”.


The court declared Tshisekedi as the “president of the Democratic Republic of Congo by simple majority.’’


The Financial Times and other foreign media have reported seeing documents that confirm Fayulu as the winner. The influential Roman Catholic Church, which says it deployed 40,000 observers to monitor the poll, has also dismissed the official outcome.




FEARS OF BLOODBATH


Awaiting Sunday’s court announcement, hundreds of Tshisekedi’s supporters gathered outside the court holding placards saying “No to interference” and “Independent country” as riot police stood nearby.


Leader of the country’s oldest and biggest opposition party, the Union for Democracy and Social Progress, 55-year-old Tshisekedi has never held high office.


The dispute has raised fears that the political crisis that began when Kabila refused to step down at the end of his constitutional term in office two years ago could turn into a bloodbath.


The vast country lived through two regional wars in 1996-97 and 1998-2003. The previous two elections, in 2006 and 2011, were marred by bloody clashes. — AFP



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