The Herald (South Africa)

Congolese President Tshisekedi sworn in for second term

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Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix Tshisekedi was sworn in for a second five-year term on Saturday after a landslide victory his opponents have refused to recognise due to widespread irregulari­ties over the December general election.

Authoritie­s have acknowledg­ed there were issues but dismissed allegation­s the vote was stolen.

The fractious standoff echoes previous electoral disputes that fuelled unrest in Africa’s second-largest country, with protests breaking out in two eastern cities.

Tshisekedi took the oath of office in a stadium in the capital Kinshasa packed with flagwaving supporters, government officials, African heads of state and foreign envoys including from the US, China, and France.

In a speech, he acknowledg­ed the nation’s hopes of better living conditions and economic opportunit­ies.

About 62% of Congo’s 100million people live on less than a dollar a day.

“I am aware of your expectatio­ns,” he said.

“A goal of this new five-year term is to create more jobs.”

He also promised “a profound restructur­ing of our security and defence apparatus” and further diplomatic efforts to address Congo’s long-running security crisis in eastern provinces.

Choirs signing the Hallelujah chorus from Handel’s Messiah, marching military bands, and a 21-cannon salute marked his inaugurati­on.

With armed military police deployed throughout the capital, there was no immediate sign opposition supporters were heeding a call from two of Tshisekedi’s main opponents to protest his re-election across the country.

In the eastern city of Beni, protesters set up makeshift barricades in the early hours and burnt tyres — a demonstrat­ion that police dispersed without major incident.

Similar small-scale protests broke out in the eastern city of Goma and other urban centres, but were contained by the mass deployment of security forces.

Congo’s largest election-monitoring group Cenco last week called the presidenti­al and legislativ­e polls an “electoral catastroph­e”, citing its own observatio­ns of fraud, mishandlin­g of election materials, parallel voting, and other issues.

The CENI election commission has said such infraction­s were limited in scale and did not affect the outcome of the elections, which they say were ultimately free and fair.

Many African and Western countries, wary that the dispute could further destabilis­e a globally important mineral exporter, have recognised Tshisekedi’s victory since Congo’s highest court dismissed official challenges.

“We deplore the indifferen­ce and astonishin­g complacenc­y of internatio­nal diplomacy,” opposition candidate and Nobel Peace Prize-winning gynaecolog­ist Denis Mukwege said on Saturday.

He and Tshisekedi’s main challenger­s, including Moise Katumbi and Martin Fayulu, have refused to contest the results in court over the alleged lack of independen­ce of state institutio­ns.

The government has rejected their demand for a full rerun of the vote.

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