Step aside, US envoy tells DRC leader Kabila

2014-06-06 08:44

Description: President of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Joseph
Kabila listens to proceedings during the International Conference of the
Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) in Kampala. (AFP)

President of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Joseph Kabila listens
to proceedings during the International Conference of the Great Lakes Region
(ICGLR) in Kampala. (AFP)

Kinshasa - The top US envoy to Africa's Great Lakes region called on
Thursday for Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila to respect
a constitutional term limit and step aside when the country organises polls
in 2016.

Several African leaders have sought to extend their rule by amending their
constitutions, and speculation is growing that Kabila may seek a third term
despite a two-term limit stipulated in Article 220 of DRC’s national
charter.

The president, who came to power after the 2003 murder of his father
president Laurent Kabila and won his first elected term in a 2006 election,
has not revealed his intentions. Government officials deny he plans to alter
the constitution.

"Our strong advice is that there is a global election calendar with the
presidential elections no later than the end of 2016, and [that there should
be] no attempt to disregard the unamendable stipulation of article 220," US
special envoy Russ Feingold told a news conference in the capital Kinshasa.

His comments echoed those of US Secretary of State John Kerry during a visit
to DRC last month and came at the end of a regional tour with special envoys
from the European Union, African Union and the United Nations.

Heavy criticism 

Last month DRC's elections commission published details of local, municipal
and urban elections which are due to take place in the second half of 2015,
but a programme for a presidential vote is still pending.

"The local elections are expensive but are not required by the
constitution," said Feingold. "Organising and financing these, but not the
[presidential] elections, which are required by the constitution, is not a
believable approach."

Feingold said holding elections was crucial for the continued development of
DRC, a vast and disordered Central African nation where millions have been
killed in various internal wars since the late 1990s, but has seen strong
growth in recent years, particularly in its mining sector.

Kabila's win in the 2011 presidential election came under heavy criticism
following reports of ballot-stuffing and violent intimidation of political
opponents.

During his visit last month, Kerry pledged $30 million in U.S. aid to
support elections as well as to finance recovery and reconstruction programs
in Congo's conflict-ridden east. But a US official said Washington reserved
the right to withhold funds if the elections process was not transparent and
credible.

 <http://www.reuters.com/> - Reuters

 

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