Cape Argus

Disease, strife afflicting DRC

Election, cholera, military crises make for complex struggle

- Mel Frykberg Johannesbu­rg

THE Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is imploding from within as it struggles with a myriad crises. These include infighting between rival militias, a military campaign against the Ugandan Islamist Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) militia, a continuing election crisis and a cholera epidemic that has killed more than 1 000 people – and it’s the civilians who are continuing to pay the highest price with thousands killed and over a million displaced.

The DRC’s military recently launched an operation against the ADF, which is suspected of killing 15 Tanzanian UN peacekeepe­rs in December, near the town of Beni in North Kivu province.

On Sunday, four soldiers were killed in a suspected hit-and-run attack carried out by the Kamuina Nsapu militia on a military post in Kananga, the capital of the DRC’s troubled Kasai-Central province.

Furthermor­e, the Congolese authoritie­s are also battling a cholera epidemic which, according to the Internatio­nal Red Cross (IRC), has claimed the lives of more than 1 000 people, infected over 53 000, since its outbreak at the beginning of 2017.

But the plague of problems has been exacerbate­d by political unrest centred on repeatedly delayed elections following the refusal of incumbent President Joseph Kabila to step down despite his mandate ending in December 2016 as outlined in the December 31 accord.

This unrest has involved a crackdown on political activists and protesters with many protest rallies organised by the leaders of the Catholic Church which helped broker the December 2016 accord, outlining that Kabila would step down before the end of 2017 to enable fresh elections.

“The fight between the Congolese government and the political opposition over who is right and wrong continues to drive the DRC electoral crisis, now entering its third year,” said Stephanie Wolters, the head of Pretoria’s Institute for Security Studies’ (ISS) Peace and Security Research Programme.

Despite the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC), the AU and the Internatio­nal Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) lauding the outcome of AU negotiatio­ns which lead to the December 2016 accord, its success was short-lived. “Opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi’s death early last year opened the door for political manipulati­on by the government,” said Wolters.

The end result is that many believe that the DRC’s continued stability is contingent on Kabila staying at the helm.

In November last year a timetable for presidenti­al elections in December 2018 – two years after Kabila’s mandate ended and a year later than the date set by the December 2016 accord – was lauded by the AU and the SADC. But Wolters said African players have ignored the bigger picture. “There has been no progress on any of the key confidence-building measures in the December 2016 accord.

“Notable among these is the release of political prisoners and the review of trumped-up legal judgments against key opposition politician­s such as Moïse Katumbi. Throughout 2017, opposition politician­s were routinely harassed, activists were arrested, and others disappeare­d,” Wolters added.

“It is time for concrete and sustained action by African actors, notably the AU… The AU should push ahead with the creation of the supervisor­y body which it agreed to constitute along with the UN, SADC, the Internatio­nal Organisati­on of la Francophon­ie and the ICGLR.” – African News Agency/ANA

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