The Democratic Republic of Congo on Monday began a tense wait
for the results of a volatile presidential election which could see the
first peaceful transfer of power in decades.
Sunday's
elections went ahead in "relative calm", according to the country's
influential Catholic Bishop Council, after two years of delays in the
notoriously unstable country.
But there were reports of
clashes at polling stations in the restive eastern South Kivu province
that claimed the lives of a police officer, an electoral official and
two civilians.
While the vote could result in the first
peaceful transition of leader since the country gained independence
from Belgium in 1960, analysts warned the threat of upheaval was great
-- given organisational hitches and suspicion of President Joseph
Kabila, who refused to quit in 2016 after his two-term limit expired.
The
election's credibility has been strained by delays and accusations that
electronic voting machines would help to rig the result.
Kabila appeared on public television late Sunday to congratulate the Congolese for having voted "in peace and dignity".
Catholic Church observers, who were present at 78 per cent of
polling stations, were due to report Monday on the ballot-counting
process.
Provisional results are due to be announced on
January 6, final results on January 15 and the new president sworn in
on January 18.
Violence
On
Sunday evening, violence erupted at a polling station in the Walungu
area of South Kivu province after an electoral official was accused of
trying to rig the vote in favour of Kabila's preferred successor,
according to an opposition candidate's campaign chief.
"An
agitated crowd started fighting with police. An officer was killed,
which we deeply regret," said Vital Kamerhe, who has been campaigning
for Felix Tshisekedi.
The mob "then attacked the
electoral official who died. Two civilians were also killed," he told
AFP of the incident which South Kivu authorities said was being
investigated.
Candidates
Kabila's
champion Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary declared Sunday to Actualite.cd news
site: "You saw how I campaigned, everything that happened. I'll be
elected, I'll be president from tonight."
Meanwhile Tshisekedi, one of his biggest rivals and the head of a veteran opposition party, UDPS, predicted: "Victory is ours."
However,
opinion polls make Martin Fayulu — until recently a little-known
legislator and former oil executive — the clear favourite.
He
has garnered around 44 per cent of voting intentions, followed by
Tshisekedi with 24 per cent and Shadary with 18 per cent, said Jason
Stearns of the Congo Research Group, based at the Center on
International Cooperation at New York University.
If
the elections are "free and fair," an opposition candidate will almost
certainly win. However, "the potential for violence is extremely high,"
he warned.
Roughly half of respondents said they would
reject the result if Shadary — a hardline former interior minister who
is facing EU sanctions for a crackdown on protesters — was declared
winner.
Organisational problems
Many voters said they were exhilarated at taking part in the first elections after the nearly 18-year Kabila era.
"I
feel liberated, freed," said Victor Balibwa, a 53-year-old civil
servant, casting his ballot in Lubumbashi, the country's mining capital
in the southeast.
But there was also much evidence of organisational problems, including with the contested voting machines.
A
monitoring commission with 40,000 grass-roots observers, set up by the
Catholic Church, said it had received 1,543 reports of incidents by
early afternoon.
Of these, 544 involved "malfunctions with voting machines," it said.
In
some places, long queues built up because of a lack of electoral roll
or because voters could not find their names on the lists, AFP reporters
found.
At Imara in Lubumbashi, 30-year-old voter Diane
Mumba, said: "The (voting) machines have been breaking down again and
again for the last two hours. I don't know when I am going to vote."
The vote for a new president took place alongside legislative and municipal polls.
Resources
Almost
the size of continental western Europe, the DRC is rich in gold,
uranium, copper, cobalt and other minerals, but little wealth trickles
down to the poor.
In the last 22 years, it has twice been a battleground for wars drawing in armies from central and southern Africa.
That legacy endures in the jungles of eastern DRC, where militias have carried out hundreds of killings.
Insecurity
and an ongoing Ebola epidemic in part of North Kivu province, and
communal violence in Yumbi, in the southwest, prompted the authorities
to postpone the elections there until March.
Around 1.25 million people in a national electoral roll of around 40 million voters are affected.
Despite this, the elections in the rest of the country have gone ahead.
Source: The EastAfrican
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