Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila. His stubborn
refusal to leave office has fuelled anger and frustration. FILE | NATION
MEDIA GROUP
Opposition parties in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) on
Monday called on President Joseph Kabila to step down ahead of elections
in December but ruled out boycotting the poll.
In an
exceptional move, five parties signed a joint statement setting out
demands ahead of the December 23 presidential vote, whose outcome is
crucial for the sprawling, volatile DRC.
"We are not
going to boycott the elections, because we have known from the very
beginning that this is the ruling party's plan, to push the opposition
into boycott the elections," said Mr Delly Sesanga, a supporter of
exiled opposition leader Moise Katumbi.
The statement —
issued two days before the start of a two-week registration for
presidential candidates — called for "free, democratic and transparent"
elections.
It said the elections had to take place
without President Kabila as a candidate and without the use of
electronic voting machines, which the government controversially wants
to deploy.
Former warlord
It was signed by five parties, including the traditional
mainstream opposition, the Union for Democracy and Social Progress
(UDPS), as well as by parties led by Mr Katumbi and Mr Jean-Pierre
Bemba, an ex-vice president and former warlord recently acquitted of war
crimes by the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
President
Kabila has been at the helm of the largest country in sub-Saharan
Africa since 2001, presiding over a mineral-rich country with a
reputation for corruption, inequality and unrest.
He was just 29 when he took over as president from his father, Laurent-Desire Kabila, who was assassinated by a bodyguard.
Dozens
of people have been killed in protests since late 2016, when President
Kabila was scheduled to stand down at the end of his second elected
term, technically the last permitted under the constitution.
Wide-ranging conflict
President Kabila has kept power, thanks to a constitutional clause enabling him to stay in office until a successor is elected.
On
Thursday, President Kabila delivered a state-of-the nation address that
had caused wide speculation that he would announce whether he would run
again, but no such big declaration was forthcoming.
The
DRC has never known a peaceful transition of power since it gained
independence from Belgium in 1960. Some experts fear it could spiral
into wide-ranging conflict once more if the present political crisis is
not resolved.
The UN Development Programme (UNDP)
placed the DRC 176th out of 188 countries on its Human Development Index
published in March 2017.
The watchdog Transparency
International ranked the country 156th out of 176 countries in its 2016
corruption index. It was ranked 154th out of 180 in the Reporters
Without Borders' 2017 Press Freedom Index.
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