Mail & Guardian

Kabila’s rivals need a better plan

- Simon Allison

So far, this has been another miserable year for opponents of Joseph Kabila. The Congolese president’s strategy of delaying elections with technical issues is working perfectly. He is already seven months beyond the expiry of his second term and shows no sign of scheduling a vote this year.

His appointmen­t of Bruno Tshibala, a minor opposition leader, as prime minister in April was a masterstro­ke that left the rest of the opposition in disarray and dismantled the December 31 2016 peace accord that was supposed to allow the opposition itself to choose a prime minister.

It helped Kabila, too, that his archrival, Étienne Tshisekedi, one of the few opposition figures with some national appeal, died in February. Tshisekedi was succeeded by his son, Felix. A political novice, he has struggled to convince other parties to rally behind him.

This context is what makes last week’s meeting of the Rassemblem­ent opposition coalition so important. Rassemblem­ent includes most opposition parties, but not all of them. If a unified front is the best way to tackle an entrenched incumbent — and Muhammadu Buhari’s victory in the 2015 Nigerian election is the best recent proof that it is — then Rassemblem­ent is the closest thing to it.

At the meeting in Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the coalition made it clear that Kabila would not have it all his way. They agreed on an action plan to remove him from office before year-end and to force an election.

The action plan is heavy on political rhetoric. Strip that away, and there are three primary steps to it:

1. A “ville morte” (“dead city”) general strike on August 8 and 9: the aim is a mass stayaway that will turn the DRC’s urban areas into ghost towns. It’s intended as a warning, said a Rassemblem­ent spokespers­on.

2. Demonstrat­ions against Kabila’s continued rule in every major town and city, planned for August 20.

3. If, by October 1, Kabila has not scheduled elections for later in 2017, the opposition coalition will begin a campaign of civil disobedien­ce, encouragin­g supporters to withhold taxes and refuse to pay for public services such as electricit­y and water.

Reactions to the opposition’s new plan of action have been mixed.

“On the one hand, it’s important that the opposition maintains some kind of public presence and public pressure,” said Stephanie Wolters, an analyst at the Institute for Security Studies in Pretoria. “We haven’t really seen anything like this since April, and it’s partially because, when Kabila slammed the accord into the wall by nominating Tshibala [as prime minister] it had no plan B. It’s encouragin­g because it seems the opposition has rallied. It has put itself back in the game.”

But on the other hand, the opposition’s well-worn tactics are unlikely to scare Kabila.

“It’s a tall order to get people to rally to two mass actions,” said Wolters. “Civil disobedien­ce is an interestin­g concept, but when you have a country like Congo where the tax base is so small anyway, can it have any impact?”

This point is powerful in light of the recent Global Witness report, which found that more than 20% of the DRC’s oil revenues — $750-million over the past three years — has been lost because of corruption and mismanagem­ent. The stolen funds are being distribute­d through corrupt networks linked to Kabila. In other words, Kabila is not reliant on tax money.

Wolters added that chronic political instabilit­y over the past few years had left people disillusio­ned with politician­s on all sides of the dispute: “The problem is that within the country this [plan of action] is the kind of thing that people are increasing­ly writing off as politician­s manoeuvrin­g for power.

“The population is exhausted, the economy is a disaster, the news out of the Kasais [a central region where the government is fighting militia groups] is horrible, people are hearing the government say there will not be elections this year … What people don’t want is action for the sake of action.”

 ??  ?? No longer a threat: DRC opposition leader Étienne Tshisekedi died in February. His son, Felix, a political novice, has struggled to convince the opposition to rally behind his party. Photo: Eduardo Soteras/AFP
No longer a threat: DRC opposition leader Étienne Tshisekedi died in February. His son, Felix, a political novice, has struggled to convince the opposition to rally behind his party. Photo: Eduardo Soteras/AFP

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