Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Change in leadership allows Congolese exiles to return

- By Saleh Mwanamilon­go

KINSHASA, Congo — Congolese art collector and businessma­n Sindika Dokolo feared being jailed if he returned to his country as an opponent of the longtime president.

During his five years in exile, a court convicted him in absentia on charges related to a real estate dispute which he says were politicall­y motivated.

All that changed when longtime President Joseph Kabila stepped down earlier this year after nearly two decades in office and handed over power to opposition figure Felix Tshisekedi.

“Now I have the opportunit­y to defend myself, to clear my name and expunge this conviction,” the 47-year-old Sindika told The Associated Press during a recent interview in Congo’s capital, Kinshasa. The judge who oversaw his case had been found not qualified and was dismissed and jailed last year.

Sindika is one of a growing number of Kabila opponents who say they now can come home after years in exile.

In the most high-profile return yet, onetime presidenti­al hopeful and former governor Moise Katumbi is expected to come home Monday after he was blocked from entering the country last year.

Katumbi was convicted in absentia in 2016 for real estate fraud and sentenced to 36 months in prison, a move his supporters said was aimed at derailing his presidenti­al ambitions. He fled the country after accusing authoritie­s of trying to poison him.

Last month, however, his conviction was overturned and he was issued a Congolese passport.

Human rights groups have welcomed the more open climate ushered in by Tshisekedi, who recently met with Sindika. The new president has released hundreds of detainees and ended a ban on public protests.

Robert Ilunga Numbi, president of a group called Friends of Nelson Mandela, applauded the conditions now allowing for prominent political exiles to return.

“This is a good start for the rule of law,” he said. “The cases that led to the conviction­s of Sindika and Katumbi were brought forth by the Kabila regime to prevent them from returning to the country. Their conviction­s were a political decision. It was a travesty of justice.”

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