Bangkok Post

Kabila likely to run again for president

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KINSHASA: From the sprawling capital Kinshasa to villages deep in the equatorial forests, Congo’s ruling PPRD is in full-on election campaign mode — and President Joseph Kabila’s face is everywhere.

The deadline for declaring candidates for Democratic Republic of Congo’s scheduled Dec 23 poll is just over two months away, and Mr Kabila, 46, is officially not allowed to run again.

But his bearded portrait smiles down from billboards and T-shirts being printed by his People’s Party for Reconstruc­tion and Democracy (PPRD), while there is no sign of a successor.

After a reshuffle this month of Congo’s Constituti­onal Court and provocativ­e comments from members of his inner circle, suspicion is rife that Mr Kabila — in power since the death of his father, Laurent, in 2001 — intends to bypass the constituti­on and run for a third term.

Any such move would likely ignite chaos across the vast, mineral-rich country, which has never seen a peaceful change of power in the 58 years since independen­ce from Belgium.

“We were with Kabila, we are still with Kabila and we will still be with Kabila,” PPRD permanent secretary Emmanuel Ramazani Shadari said on May 5 in an address aired on radio.

The deadline for declaring candidates is Aug 8.

A spokesman for Mr Shadari did not respond to a request for clarificat­ion, Mr Kabila has repeatedly dodged the question and government spokesman Lambert Mende told reporters on Monday he was “not aware of a plan to change the constituti­on”.

Mr Kabila is unpopular in the capital Kinshasa and many parts of the country. A rare poll released in March showed that eight in 10 Congolese have an unfavourab­le opinion of him. Scores have died in protests since he refused to step down when his mandate expired 18 months ago.

Militias have proliferat­ed, killing and displacing villagers, kidnapping foreigners and shutting down eco-tourist spots. The violence has hit mining operations in Africa’s top copper producer and the world’s leading miner of cobalt.

Earlier this month, Mr Kabila appointed three new judges to the Constituti­onal Court, including two close allies.

His opponents fear the court will legitimise running again on a legal technicali­ty — the fact that electoral procedure in the constituti­on has changed since Mr Kabila was first elected in 2006, although the twoterm limit was there before.

“The legal basis that legislated the 2006 elections was different from the one of the 2011 elections,” legal expert Jean-Cyrus Mirindi, a Mr Kabila ally, told a debating forum in Kinshasa late last month.

Long before the changes, the court had ruled when Mr Kabila’s mandate expired in 2016 that he could stay on until the poll.

Another option for Mr Kabila is to hold a referendum, as his allies have sometimes suggested.

Resistance could come from Congo’s Catholic church, which has slowly transforme­d from a mediator for peace to lightning rod for dissatisfa­ction with Mr Kabila.

Donatien Nshole, spokesman for the church council, told a news conference this week “the bishops will never support” a Mr Kabila third term.

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