Mail & Guardian

DRC leader launches election bid in SA

Announceme­nt comes as SA increases pressure on President Kabila to stick to the new election timetable

- Carien du Plessis

Congolese opposition leader Moïse Katumbi launched his presidenti­al bid in the “country of Mandela” this week, saying he was inspired by South Africa’s peaceful change of presidents last month.

His bid comes amid indication­s that South Africa and its neighbours are exerting pressure behind the scenes on the Democratic Republic of Congo’s president, Joseph Kabila, to stick to the schedule for the planned December 23 elections. They should have been held in 2016, when Kabila’s second term expired.

The DRC’s elections body said concerns about money, a population census and violence by rebel group M23 necessitat­ed the delay.

Since then, people are reported to have been killed or injured in protests organised by the Catholic Church over the postponeme­nt.

Katumbi, previously governor of the southeaste­rn Katanga province before a falling-out with Kabila, said he had known former president Jacob Zuma for a long time.

“I was coming to South Africa, so I think you can see yourself how democracy goes in South Africa. There was no blood, nobody was killed in South Africa. That’s why I chose South Africa,” he said at a press conference on Monday. “The South African government, at the time of [former] president [Thabo] Mbeki, they gave us a podium to resolve all our problems. So for me, I appreciate what South African people did. They spent money on [the DRC’s] democracy. That’s why I came to thank the South African government and to congratula­te them on the new change [of presidents] in South Africa.”

Mbeki helped to facilitate peace talks after a civil war in the DRC, resulting in the Sun City Agreement in 2002. But many in the Congolese opposition regarded Zuma as an ally of Kabila because of the Zuma family’s reported business interests in the DRC.

Katumbi’s choice of Johannesbu­rg from which to launch his presidenti­al bid is likely to have increased the pressure on Kabila. Stephanie Wolters from the Institute for Security Studies said he was “sending a strong signal to Kabila not to count on South Africa as an ally”.

“It is important for the opposition to have support in the region and also from a country like South Africa,” she added. “There are many more challenges for Katumbi before the election, and he does not know that these will be free and fair.”

Katumbi has lived in Europe since being sentenced in absentia in June 2016 for the illegal sale of a property in Lubumbashi. He says he could be arrested if he returns to the DRC in June. But his sentence and dual Italian citizenshi­p might preclude him from running for the presidency, Wolters said.

It is understood that Western government­s have let up their pressure on Kabila over Katumbi’s case, with some believed to be backing another opposition leader, Vital Kamerhe.

Home affairs spokespers­on Mayihlome Tshwete did not respond to questions about how more than 100 DRC citizens, who flew in to attend Katumbi’s launch of his presidenti­al bid, got visas at short notice.

Organisers said the launch was kept secret because of security considerat­ions.

South Africa is said to be concerned that opposition supporters could use the country to organise an insurrecti­on or instabilit­y in the DRC, but Katumbi this week told supporters “let’s have an election, not fighting”.

South Africa has not openly challenged Kabila about the postponeme­nt of the 2016 elections. After his visit to Pretoria in June last year, Zuma said South Africa accepted Kabila’s explanatio­n that technical problems had delayed the elections.

A government official said South Africa and other countries in the region are “working very hard behind the scenes” to ensure that DRC’s elections go ahead in December.

The DRC’s ambassador in Pretoria, Bene M’Poko, said meetings with South Africa’s Independen­t Electoral Commission and others in the region about assistance with training and logistics are taking place.

In the past, South Africa helped with ballot papers and transport but budget constraint­s are said to be a problem. The British government has proposed building a 112-bed wing at the Kirikiri maximum security prison in Nigeria at a cost of £700 000. This would enable Britain to repatriate Nigerian inmates in United Kingdom jails, in line with a 2014 prisoner transfer agreement between the two countries. UK foreign secretary Boris Johnson says the new prison would allow some of the 320-plus Nigerian inmates serving time in the UK to be sent home. But the Nigerian prison service said it has not been notified about this.

Listeriosi­s travels to Namibia

A 41-year-old man is fighting for his life in a Namibian hospital after becoming the country’s first listeriosi­s victim. The man became ill after eating a vienna sausage from a butchery about 475km north of Windhoek, where he is now receiving treatment. The announceme­nt came a week after Namibia announced it was banning imports from Enterprise, which was revealed as the source of the world’s largest ever listeriosi­s outbreak in South Africa.

Runoff in Sierre Leone poll

In an election dominated by issues of corruption, the economy and the state of the country’s education and health systems, Sierra Leone’s main opposition party candidate, Julius Maada Bio, secured 43.3% of the vote. But it was not enough to win outright. Now, Bio will face a runoff election against ruling party candidate Samura Kamara, who trailed him by just 0.6%. —

South Africa is said to be concerned that the opposition supporters could use the country to organise an insurrecti­on or instabilit­y in the DRC

 ??  ?? Appreciati­ve: Moïse Katumbi says he launched his bid to be president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo in South Africa this week because it is a functionin­g democracy and had previously helped to facilitate peace talks in the DRC. Photo: Federico...
Appreciati­ve: Moïse Katumbi says he launched his bid to be president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo in South Africa this week because it is a functionin­g democracy and had previously helped to facilitate peace talks in the DRC. Photo: Federico...

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