The people of DRC anxiously
await outcome of Presidential election
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| Congolese policemen take positions near Congo Independent National Electoral Commission (CENI) headquarters in Kinshasa. |
The people of the Democratic Republic of Congo are anxiously
awaiting the outcome of the 30th December Presidential election.
By Linda Bordoni
Clouds of distrust and decades of injustice threaten
to unleash yet another socio-political storm in the Democratic Republic of
Congo where the Independent National Electoral Commission continues to drag its
heals.
Electoral officials blame problems collecting the data for
having postponed the announcement of results while tensions continue to
increase in the country where past elections have been marred by deadly
violence.
One top official promised the long awaited results should be
counted within 24 hours.
The elections, postponed three times over the last two
years, were to choose a successor to long-term President Joseph Kabila.
While the announcement of provisional results, which were
due last Sunday, have been pushed back - to officially allow the Electoral
Commission to make final deliberations - many citizens say they are convinced
the opposition won and that the delay in announcing results is allowing
manipulation in favor of the ruling party.
Since the vote, the government has cut internet service in
the vast Central African country to prevent speculation on social media, it
says, about who won and it has blocked some radio stations. But it cannot stop
lively debate on the ground and riot police have been deployed in the capital
Kinshasa as it braces for possible violence.
The poll was meant to lead to country's first democratic
transfer of power in its 59 years of independence, but a disputed result could
trigger the kind of violence that erupted after the 2006 and 2011 elections and
destabilize the volatile regions on the DRC’s eastern border.
DRC Catholic Bishops
The Catholic Bishops’ Conference in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo has also voiced its concern about voting irregularities.
DRC bishops continue to be key players vying for peace and
justice in the historically exploited nation that is rich in resources but
wracked by inequality, poverty and violence.
They were crucial in mediating an agreement between the
country’s ruling political coalition and opposition leaders in 2016 that
culminated in a pact that allowed Kabila to remain in office beyond his
mandate provided he step down after the December 30th vote.
Pope Francis
Pope Francis meanwhile this week said he was following the
developing situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo with special concern.
Speaking to the diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See
on Monday he urged respect for the result of the election and expressed his
hope that the country would regain the reconciliation it has long awaited to be
able to undertake a decisive journey towards development.

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