Police fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators in several
Congolese cities Thursday and arrested two opposition leaders in a
clampdown on protests against President Joseph Kabila.
Opposition
figures had vowed to push ahead with the demonstrations, despite a ban,
as tensions soar over Kabila's refusal to step down at the end of his
term in December 2016.
In power since 2001, Kabila's prolonged rule has already led to street protests and a bloody crackdown.
Elections
had been due to take place by the end of 2017 under a deal with the
opposition aimed at avoiding bloodshed, but the date has since been
pushed back until December 23 2018, further heightening tensions.
In
Kinshasa, police fired tear gas to disperse about 100 supporters
outside the home of opposition coalition head Felix Tshisekedi, blocking
off access to the street, AFP correspondents said.
They
also arrested Jean-Marc Kabund, general secretary of the opposition
Union for Democracy and Social Progress (UDPS) and lawmaker Martin
Fayulu, UDPS said.
The party also said a third leader, Olivier Endundo, was arrested separately.
The party also said a third leader, Olivier Endundo, was arrested separately.
Several people were arrested around the Kinshasa university campus, which was placed under close watch by police.
"Struggle for Change"
Further
east, police used tear gas to break up a demonstration in Kananga, the
main city in the restive central Kasai province, injuring two people,
with several others taking refuge in facilities run by the UN
peacekeeping mission, Monusco, an AFP correspondent said.
Young
demonstrators also clashed with police and erected barricades in Goma,
capital of the troubled North Kivu province which is a stronghold of the
Lucha citizens' movement.
Lucha, whose name means "Struggle for Change", said 10 of its activists had been arrested in neighbouring South Kivu.
Police spokesman Colonel Pierrot-Rombaut Mwanamputu warned there would be no tolerance for anyone disturbing the public order.
"The police will discourage anyone who prevents others from freely going about their business," he said.
Kabila's
stubborn refusal to leave office has fuelled anger and frustration,
which is threatening to unleash a flareup of violence in this vast
war-torn central African country.
Tshisekedi,
who called Thursday's protests, urged people to take to the streets "to
show that we've had enough of this regime which is on its way out".
The opposition wants "a transition without Kabila" from December 31.
But
authorities in larger towns and cities quickly slapped a ban on the
protests, prompting noises of concern from the UN, which urged Kinshasa
to "respect" the right to freedom of assembly.
During
protest marches in Goma and the city of Butembo on Tuesday, at least six
people were wounded and 26 arrested, Monusco said.
Kabila,
who took over from his father in 2001, was to have stepped down in
December after a constitutional maximum of two terms in office.
However, he is allowed to remain in office until a successor is elected, according to a court ruling.
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