DR Congo’s Kabila ‘not to stand for re-election’
President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Joseph Kabila has reportedly announced that he will not be seeking a third term in long-delayed elections in December.
The announcement was made through Lambert Mende, a government spokesman, on Wednesday, who also said that Kabila’s ruling coalition had nominated former interior minister Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary as its presidential candidate for the December 23 vote.
Flanked by supporters, Ramazani filed his candidacy at the headquarters of the national electoral commission in the Congolese capital of Kinshasa later in the day.
“[Kabila] said there would be no problem. He said there would be no third term. Today, he has kept his promise,” Ramazani said in a brief address to reporters. “It is a great honor for me and, with time, we are going to offer a social program.”
Wednesday afternoon was the electoral commission’s deadline for candidates to register, with reports saying that eight other candidates had also registered to run, including some opposition candidates.
“What matters for the moment is that the constitution, whether willingly or not, has been respected,” said Senator Jacques Ndjoli, a member of an opposition party, the Movement for the Liberation of Congo. “Despite the multiple attempts to circumvent the constitution, President Kabila finally understood that the supreme law applies to everyone.”
Shadary has been a key supporter of Kabila and his tenure as interior minister was marked by a violent crackdown on opposition politicians and their supporters as well as the arrest of activists.
Kabila is said to remain at the head of his People’s Party for Reconstruction and Democracy (PPRD) and will be eligible to run again in 2023.
SS