Daily Nation Newspaper

Church leaders in DRC say election observers are critical

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KINSHASA - Catholic leaders who mediated a compromise on elections in Democratic Republic of the Congo warned on Monday that the credibilit­y of the long-delayed vote scheduled in December depends "to a great extent" on the presence of national and internatio­nal observers - and that "bias" will keep the country in crisis.

Monsignor Marcel Utembi, president of the National Episcopal Conference known as CENCO, encouraged the government to implement all provisions of the December 31, 2016 agreement that it mediated - especially de-escalation measures - and to take into account concerns of opponents and civil society.

"If elections are biased, they will keep us in a crisis ... and the lack of clarificat­ion in the situation will cause grave problems," he warned. The vast, mineral-rich nation is under pressure to ensure free and fair elections. President Joseph Kabila, who became DRC's leader in 2001 after the assassinat­ion of his father, former President Laurent Kabila, by law could not run again after his mandate ended in December 2016. But he remained in office because of delays in holding elections, which sparked deadly protests. Kabila announced last month that he would not try to stay in office, giving one of Africa's most turbulent nations the opportunit­y for what could be its first peaceful, democratic transfer of power.

But there are concerns, raised not only by CENCO but by US Ambassador Nikki Haley and other council members, that Kabila will try to ensure that his chosen candidate, former interior minister Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary, will win.

Utembi outlined a series of recommenda­tions from CENCO to the government and the Independen­t Electoral Commission known as CENI to ensure fair elections including: agree to facilitate national and internatio­nal observatio­n of the elections; reach consensus on whether to use voting machines; and prevent "arbitrary applicatio­n of rules to certain candidates who wish to run." The opposition and some in the internatio­nal community, including the US, are objecting to the planned use of electronic voting machines despite warnings from watchdog groups that transparen­cy and credibilit­y could suffer. In response, DRC's government declared it will fund the election itself and has not asked for help from the UN peacekeepi­ng mission in the country. Haley raised a series of "red flags and unanswered questions" at Monday's

If elections are biased, they will keep us in a crisis and the lack of clarificat­ion in the situation will cause grave problems,” — Monsignor Utembi.

council meeting including about the voting machines. She asked: Will there be enough machines? Can authoritie­s recharge them with only a 12- hour battery life? Have election organisers widely tested them? How is the electoral commission going to transport election materials to more than 90, 000 polling places? Will voters know how to use touchscree­ns? Are organisers preparing paper ballots as a back-up? "Paper ballots were good enough to get President Kabila elected, and they should be good enough as a fail-safe to elect his successor," Haley said, adding that if the president was at the UN today she would ask whether self-financing the election and doing it without help from the UN peacekeepi­ng mission is possible.

"It can't help but raise suspicion when the Congolese government refuses the assistance that would help make free, fair and credible elections a reality, but continue to take the humanitari­an assistance that so many of us continue to give them," she said. Haley said other "red flags" add to US suspicions including the electoral commission's August 24 decision "to disqualify some opposition presidenti­al candidates for what appear to be political reasons."

Opposition candidates must be allowed to speak freely, without fear or harassment so that all parties compete "on a level playing field," she said.

 ??  ?? Laurent Kabila
Laurent Kabila

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