Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

DRC Kabila will not stand for re-election: spokesman

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DEMOCRATIC Republic of Congo (DRC) President Joseph Kabila will not stand for re-election in December, a government spokesman has announced.

Kabila’s ruling coalition nominated former interior minister Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary as its presidenti­al candidate, Lambert Mende, the government spokesman, said yesterday.

The move put an end to years of speculatio­n on whether Kabila would defy terms limits.

The government waited until the last moment to announce Kabila’s decision not to run. The electoral commission’s deadline for candidates to register was Wednesday afternoon.

Catherine Soi, reporting from the capital Kinshasa, said Ramazani’s nomination came as a surprise.

“Over the days, several names [of Kabila’s replacemen­ts] have been floating around, but his name never really featured,” she said.

“The nomination came after a long consultati­on between the president and his coalition.”

The uncertaint­y about Kabila’s intentions raised concern over the past few days, she said.

“But now that has been cleared and analysts are telling us that these tensions that have been in the country could de-escalate,” she said.

Kabila, whose second term officially ended in 2016, is constituti­onally ineligible to run in December’s poll, although his rivals accused him of wanting to stay in power.

Shadary, a close ally of Kabila, used to serve as deputy prime minister. He was sanctioned by the European Union for alleged human rights violations in 2017.

Shadary counts as one of Kabila’s most loyal followers but, as a politician, is not very popular among DR Congo’s roughly 80 million people.

Kabila talks with religious leaders after a meeting with coalition members [Kenny Katombe/Reuters]

“It’s a rare bird,” said Mende after the announceme­nt, refusing to answer journalist­s’ questions about the candidacy.

Several opposition candidates have registered for the poll, including former Vice President JeanPierre Bemba, who had conviction­s for war crimes and crimes against humanity overturned in June.

Another candidate is Vital Kamerhe, leader of opposition party Union for the Congolese Nation and former national assembly president, who came third in the 2011 election.

Felix Tshisekedi, leader of the largest opposition party Union for Democracy and Social Progress, who is the son of late opposition activist Etienne Tshisekedi, also filed his candidacy.

Opposition candidate Moise Katumbi was, however, refused entry to the country last week, after spending two years in exile in Belgium.

The former governor of the wealthy Katanga province and former Kabila ally was convicted in absentia for real-estate fraud in 2016. He has denied the charges, saying they were used to obstruct his political career.

The country has seen widespread anger over what some see as Kabila’s refusal to relinquish power after the end of his second full term in December 2016.

Kabila came to power in 2001 after the assassinat­ion of his father, Laurent-Desire Kabila, the country’s third president.

He was elected in 2006 in the DRC’s first democratic election since it gained independen­ce from Belgium in 1960.

Kabila secured a second term in 2011, though that election was plagued by allegation­s of widespread voter fraud. — Al Jazeera

 ??  ?? Emergency workers recover a body from the Jamiul Jamaah Mosque after it collapsed on Sunday. — AP
Emergency workers recover a body from the Jamiul Jamaah Mosque after it collapsed on Sunday. — AP
 ??  ?? Muhammadu Buhari
Muhammadu Buhari

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