The Star Late Edition

SADC calls for recount in DRC presidenti­al poll

Regional leaders recommend government of national unity amid claims of vote rigging

- SHANNON EBRAHIM

Group Foreign Editor

AMID growing accusation­s by members of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) opposition and civil society of vote-rigging, the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC) has called for a recount of votes cast in the election and for all political leaders to consider a government of national unity.

The SADC said it had taken note of the strong doubts cast on the poll outcome by the Roman Catholic Church in the DRC, which deployed more than 40 000 monitors and other observers, and that a recount would provide the necessary reassuranc­e to both winners and losers.

Zambian President Edgar Lungu, in his capacity as chairperso­n of the SADC Organ on Politics, Defence and Security, said he had spoken to the SADC leaders, as well as the proclaimed winner Felix Tshisekedi, and drew “the attention of the Congolese politician­s to similar arrangemen­ts that were very successful in South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Kenya where government­s of national unity created the necessary stability for durable peace”.

South Africa was in full agreement with the SADC in recommendi­ng that the political players consider a negotiated settlement as an option that could include a GNU, said Minister of Internatio­nal Relations Lindiwe Sisulu, who addressed the media in Johannesbu­rg yesterday on the electoral outcomes in both the DRC and Madagascar.

“It is important that the people of the DRC must decide what is best for them. As the final decision lies with them, we cannot prescribe to them,” she said.

Sisulu was clear that South Africa did not want to pre-empt developmen­ts in the DRC. She acknowledg­ed that opposition presidenti­al candidate Martin Fayulu was contesting the election results, as he did not believe that they were a true reflection and he was going to go through the courts.

“We applaud that,” she said.

Sisulu, who has been closely monitoring the developmen­ts in the DRC and engaging various stakeholde­rs throughout the electoral period, was elated at the peaceful outcome of the elections.

“Given the sheer size of the DRC, the fact that there were more than 600 political candidates and 12 000 candidates for parliament­ary elections, and despite the violence of the past, this is the first comprehens­ive election in the DRC since independen­ce.

“CENI (the Independen­t National Electoral Commission) needs to be congratula­ted,” she said.

Since becoming minister, Sisulu has consistent­ly said that there had to be an election in the DRC.

Since South Africa took up its seat as a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council at the beginning of the year, it has played an influentia­l role in ensuring that the discussion on the DRC in the UN Security Council included a briefing from the SADC, as well as from the Congolese churches.

The concern now is to ensure that tensions do not escalate further in the DRC and that there is no threat to peace and stability in the country.

Fayulu claimed that he won by a landslide and the official winner, Felix Tshisekedi, struck a deal with former president Joseph Kabila to be declared the victor.

Alain Shekomba, a popular presidenti­al candidate particular­ly with the youth of the DRC, withdrew from the electoral race two days before the poll, claiming the election had been rigged and that to participat­e would have been to legitimise the process.

Shekomba believed that a deal between Kabila and Tshisekedi was struck well before the election itself. Fully supporting the SADC’s call for a vote recount, Shekomba has said: “Vote recounting is a democratic process that must be supported by anyone with common sense and rationalit­y.”

 ?? AP ?? Congo opposition candidate Martin Fayulu, centre, leaves the Philadelph­ie Missionary Centre after attending Sunday Mass in Kinshasa, Congo, yesterday. President elect Felix Tshisekedi was also scheduled to attend the service, but cancelled. The Roman Catholic Church has voiced its doubts over the election results in the DRC. | African News Agency (ANA)
AP Congo opposition candidate Martin Fayulu, centre, leaves the Philadelph­ie Missionary Centre after attending Sunday Mass in Kinshasa, Congo, yesterday. President elect Felix Tshisekedi was also scheduled to attend the service, but cancelled. The Roman Catholic Church has voiced its doubts over the election results in the DRC. | African News Agency (ANA)

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