Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Pressure mounts on DRC to announce election outcome

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PUBLIC and diplomatic pressure mounted on Monday on the Democratic Republic of Congo to announce the outcome of December 30 elections to replace long-term leader Joseph Kabila.

More than a week after the crucial poll, the volatile central African country’s electoral commission has not set a date for the results announceme­nt, already postponed once.

The count is taking place in a climate of deep suspicion in a country that has never had a peaceful transition of power since independen­ce from Belgium in 1960.

On Sunday, election commission head Corneille Nangaa said just over half of ballots had been counted.

He appealed to the public “to remain patient for the time it will take to consolidat­e all our data.”

But on Monday, the foreign minister of former colonial power Belgium — a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council due to discuss the situation in DRC this week — urged haste.

“The important thing today is to publish the results of the elections in the Democratic Republic of Congo even if they do not please the powers that be,” Didier Reynders told Belgium’s RTBF broadcaste­r. “We hope for an announceme­nt in the coming days.”

For its part, the CLC collective of Congolese Catholic laypeople which coordinate­d anti-Kabila protests in 2017 and 2018, bemoaned what it described as “collusion” between the country’s ruling FCC coalition and the CENI election commission.

It accused the FCC (Common Front for Congo) and CENI of levelling “aggressive and unjustifie­d” criticism against the country’s powerful Catholic Church, and said this “confirms, in everyone’s eyes, their collusion” and revealed “a hidden agenda.”

The Church had deployed some 40 000 election observers, who fanned out across the vast country.

Its episcopal commission CENCO last week declared that it knew who had won, thanks to its monitoring. It urged the authoritie­s to publish the results “in keeping with truth and justice”.

“The CLC reiterates its call to the Congolese people to remain more than ever vigilant, to remain united and to be wary of arsonists posing as firefighte­rs,” said a CLC statement.

There were protestati­ons from the FCC side as well. “Ambassador­s are saying that (opposition candidate Martin) Fayulu has won,” complained a confidant of Kabila, citing permanent UNSC members France, the United States, and Britain.

Twenty-one candidates ran in the election to succeed Kabila, who has ruled the vast conflictri­dden country for almost 18 years.

Among the frontrunne­rs were Fayulu, another opposition candidate Felix Tshisekedi, and Kabila’s preferred successor, Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary.

Kabila was due to step down two years ago, but clung on to power, sparking widespread protests which were brutally repressed.

Last month’s election, preceded by repeated delays, was relatively peaceful. But tensions have built over the lengthy counting process even as the government cut internet access and blocked broadcasts by Radio France Internatio­nale.

On Saturday, just hours before Sunday’s scheduled announceme­nt of the provisiona­l outcome, electoral officials announced an indefinite delay.

Nangaa has said the tallying is made difficult by massive logistical problems in a resource-poor country the size of western Europe. The United States and European Union have urged Kinshasa to ensure a peaceful transfer of power, while the African Union, which sent election monitors, said it was “crucial” to respect voters’ wishes.

Denis Sassou Nguesso, president of the Republic of Congo to the west, urged restraint in uncertain times to “safeguard peace and stability in this brother country”.

The last two presidenti­al elections in 2006 and 2011, both won by Kabila, were marred by bloodshed. Between 1996 and 2003, the DRC suffered two wars that claimed millions of lives through fighting, starvation, and disease. − AFP A FRENCH author has been mocked on social media after claiming he would be “incapable” of loving a woman who was over the age of 50.

Yann Moix, who is 50 himself, added that women of that age and older are “invisible” to him.

The popular writer, director and television presenter told Marie Claire’s French edition: “I prefer younger women’s bodies, that’s all. End of.

“The body of a 25-year-old woman is extraordin­ary. The body of a woman of 50 is not extraordin­ary at all.”

Moix added that he likes to date Asian women — particular­ly people from Korea, China and Japan.

He added: “It’s perhaps sad and reductive for the women I go out with but the Asian type is sufficient­ly rich, large and infinite for me not to be ashamed.”

His remarks were met with mockery on Twitter, with one social media user joking: “Can women under 50 be invisible to you too please?”

The French comedienne Marina Fois, who is about to turn 49, joked in a tweet: “More than 1 year and 14 days to sleep with #yannmoix #inchallah it is done.”

The French MP Olivia Gregoire, a spokesman for Macron’s En Marche! party, tweeted: “Very classy Yann Moix. Very very classy.”

Anne Roumanoff, another French comic, said on Europe 1 radio that romance was not “just about the firmness of the buttocks”.

She added: “I hope that one day he knows this happiness.”

Moix, who is promoting his latest book Rompre, has since defended his remarks and said he was only being honest.

He told the French radio station RTL: “Every individual is a prisoner of their tastes. I’m a prisoner of mine.

“It takes nothing away from a woman of 50 years that I don’t want to sleep with her.”

Moix has won several literary prizes, with his first book Jubilation­s Vers Le Ciel winning the Prix Goncourt for a debut novel in 1996. — The Mirror,

 ??  ?? At least four people were killed and around 300 injured on Tuesday after two trains collided in the South African capital Pretoria, an emergency services official said. The crash, which occurred at 9:30AM, left 82 passengers with serious injuries after a packed train careered into a stationary train at Mountain View station. “We do not rule out the possibilit­y of additional fatalities as we search under the wreckage,” emergency official Charles Mabaso said. An investigat­ion into the cause of the collision was ongoing, Mabaso said. This is the latest in a series of train accidents in South Africa, which has the continent`s largest railway network. In October, 320 people were injured after a packed train travelling from Johannesbu­rg to Pretoria crashed into the back of a stationary train. − Sapa
At least four people were killed and around 300 injured on Tuesday after two trains collided in the South African capital Pretoria, an emergency services official said. The crash, which occurred at 9:30AM, left 82 passengers with serious injuries after a packed train careered into a stationary train at Mountain View station. “We do not rule out the possibilit­y of additional fatalities as we search under the wreckage,” emergency official Charles Mabaso said. An investigat­ion into the cause of the collision was ongoing, Mabaso said. This is the latest in a series of train accidents in South Africa, which has the continent`s largest railway network. In October, 320 people were injured after a packed train travelling from Johannesbu­rg to Pretoria crashed into the back of a stationary train. − Sapa

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