President Joseph Kabila |
Democratic Republic of
Congo should recount the votes of its contested presidential election
that the runner-up says was rigged, the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) said on Sunday.
The Dec. 30 poll was supposed
to mark Congo’s first uncontested democratic transfer of power in 59
years of restive independence and the beginning of a new era following
18 years of chaotic rule by President Joseph Kabila.
But
runner-up Martin Fayulu claims that he in fact won by a landslide and
that the official winner, opposition leader Felix Tshisekedi, struck a
deal with Kabila to be declared victor. Tshisekedi and Kabila deny this.
Congo’s
Catholic Church has said that tallies compiled by its 40,000-strong
monitoring team show a different winner to those announced by the
electoral commission, without saying who.
Isolated post-election violence across the massive, mineral-rich
country of 80 million people has many fearing a return to the kind of
civil-war unrest that have killed millions since the 1990s.
“A recount would provide the necessary reassurance to both winners and losers,” SADC said in a statement.
SADC, which includes old Kabila allies Angola and South Africa,
recommended a government of national unity including parties
representing Kabila, Fayulu and Tshisekedi that could promote peace.
“SADC draws the attention of Congolese politicians to similar arrangements that were very successful in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Kenya” that created the “necessary stability for durable peace,” the statement said.
The
chance of this kind of unity in Congo appear slim for now. Fayulu, who
is backed by bitter political rivals of Kabila, on Saturday filed a
formal election complaint with the Constitutional Court.
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