Joseph Kabila |
The president of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Joseph
Kabila, kept his country guessing on Thursday over his political plans
five months ahead of crucial elections.
In a
state-of-the-nation speech that had sparked intense speculation of an
announcement, Kabila vowed to stand by the December 23 date for the
poll, and "unequivocally respect the constitution".
But,
in a long speech enumerating his government's policies, Kabila did not
spell out whether he would seek a new term in office.
The opposition reacted angrily to the speech.
"It's
what the Congolese people have come to expect from someone who thinks
he's an eternal monarch," said opposition lawmaker Claudel Andre Lubaya.
'Muscular reaction'
A spokesman for his party, the Union for Democracy and Progress,
told AFP a "muscular reaction" would be forthcoming on Friday, without
elaborating.
Kabila has been at the helm of the largest country in sub-Saharan Africa since 2001.
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 Kabila was
scheduled to stand down at the end of his second elected term,
technically the last permitted under the constitution.
Kabila has kept power thanks to a constitutional clause enabling him to stay in office until a successor is elected.
Fresh
elections should have been held in December 2016, but were then
postponed until 2017 and are now scheduled to be held on December 23.
'Change direction'
The
United Nations, the European Union and Western powers have repeatedly
urged the authorities to stand by the latest polling date and ensure
that the ballot is fair, free and credible.
On
Thursday, Ida Sawyer, Human Rights Watch's director for Central Africa,
said: "Increased pressure is urgently needed to convince (Kabila) to
change direction."
Sawyer left the DR Congo in 2016 after working in the country for a
decade when Kinshasa revoked her visa, apparently over the HRW's
frequent criticism of the rights situation.
Some experts fear the
vast, troubled country, which has experienced two major wars in 22
years, could spiral into a bloodbath if the election is postponed or
deemed to be fraudulent.
The window for registering presidential bids runs from July 25 to August 8.
A
few hours before the speech, the grassroots pro-democracy movement
Lucha wrote on its Twitter account that if Kabila declared his
candidacy, "let us all rise up immediately to force him out, as we
should have done long ago."
And if Kabila chooses not to seek another
term, "let us continue to demand real elections, which are impossible
with him and his CENI (the national election board) in control," it
said.
(The EastAfrican)
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