President Felix Tshisekedi |
DR Congo President Felix Tshisekedi on Monday blocked newly-named
senators from taking office and called for a probe into corruption that
had allegedly stained their election, an official said.
The
announcement was made by the acting interior minister, Basile Olongo,
after supporters of Tshisekedi’s predecessor, Joseph Kabila, swept to
victory in last Friday’s senatorial elections.
After an
inter-ministerial meeting, Olongo said Tshisekedi was “suspending the
senators’ induction” and postponing elections for provincial governors,
due on March 26, until further notice.
He also asked prosecutors to “open inquiries into ingrained corruption” among elected officials.
“Senators
and provincial deputies, those who corrupt and those are corrupted…
(must be) severely punished,” the president was quoted as saying.
HUGE MAJORITY
The
Democratic Republic of Congo’s upper house is elected indirectly by the
country’s provincial assemblies — a process that critics say is
notorious for kickbacks.
Elections that were held in 24 out of the
country’s 26 provinces — the vote was postponed in the other two —
handed 84 out of 100 Senate seats to Kabila’s Common Front for Congo
(FCC) coalition.
That huge majority entitles the FCC to make
changes to the country’s constitution or pursue legal proceedings
against the current head of state.
The
FCC also wields a massive majority in the lower house, the National
Assembly, after the December 30 elections won at the presidential level
by Tshisekedi.
‘LITTLE POWER’
Taking office
on January 24 in the first peaceful transition of power in DR Congo
since it became independent from Belgium in 1960, Tshisekedi vowed to
root out entrenched corruption and improve its record on human rights.
Last week, he issued pardons for an opposition leader and a rights activist jailed during Kabila’s 18-year presidency.
But he has otherwise struggled to push ahead with legislative reforms in the face of Kabila’s power base.
ARRESTS
On
Monday, Arthur Ilunga, the prosecutor at the court of appeal in Matadi,
in the southwestern region of central Kongo, said three provincial
deputies who faced “serious suspicions about corruption” had been
arrested.
“The list could lengthen because the investigation is ongoing,” Ilunga said. He did not give the name of the three arrested.
Tshisekedi’s own party, the UDPS, has come under attack from the grassroots over the vote-buying charges.
The
party’s interim president, Jean-Marc Kabund, told a rally in
Lubumbashi, in the southeast, that 26 UDPS deputies in four provincial
assemblies would be handed over to the authorities.
“These deputies will be stripped of their posts and replaced by their alternates,” he said.
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