Kabila's rivals cave in

HOPEFUL: Incumbent Congolese President Joseph Kabila casts his ballot in the Democratic Republic of Congo's capital Kinshasa on Monday. photo: REUTERS
HOPEFUL: Incumbent Congolese President Joseph Kabila casts his ballot in the Democratic Republic of Congo's capital Kinshasa on Monday. photo: REUTERS

KINSHASA - Congolese opposition candidate Vital Kamerhe yesterday withdrew his call for the presidential and parliamentary elections to be annulled on the grounds of widespread irregularities.

The move means that both Kamerhe and veteran opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi, the other serious rival standing against President Joseph Kabila, appear happy to allow the ballot count to go ahead.

Kabila's camp has meanwhile accused its rivals of pre-empting official results and said security measures were being taken to contain trouble.

Three opposition candidates have called for the vote, which was plagued by delays and isolated outbreaks of violence, to be cancelled. African observer missions have praised the poll, while the US-based Carter Centre raised some concerns, but said it was too early to make a judgment.

In a letter addressed to senior Congolese and international officials earlier this week, Kamerhe had called for the poll to be annulled due to irregularities.

But, two days later and after results had started being published, Kamerhe, a former speaker of parliament and minister in Kabila's government, told journalists there had been improvements in voting conditions during election day.

"At this moment, we are not calling for the cancellation of the results," Kamerhe said, adding that results should be widely published as they were collated, to avoid fraud.

Kamerhe said he and Tshisekedi had considered joining others calling for the poll to be cancelled, but had decided against it because witnesses had been allowed into polling stations and voters themselves controlled alleged efforts at ballot-stuffing.

Monday's elections were accompanied by violence in which at least eight people died, shortages of voting materials and confusion over voter lists.

The African Union (AU) has urged candidates to accept the outcome, saying they were well managed despite technical problems and violence. The AU and other African observer missions have rejected the calls for the vote to be cancelled.

Tshisekedi's camp has said early indications from polling stations suggest he is in the lead, and Tshisekedi conspicuously failed to join the call of other candidates for an annulment.

Evariste Boshab, secretary-general of the ruling PPRD party, accused Tshisekedi's camp of pre-empting results.

"My smile, my confidence, is that not enough for you?" he said when asked how Kabila had fared in the vote.

The George Soros-funded Osisa and Congolese observer group AETA said in a joint statement that the population had voted in large numbers, but there were shortcomings with organisation.

The Congolese group blamed the election commission for the problems and called for a cancellation of results and/or a re-vote in places where there were problems.

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