KINSHASA, Congo — In a calm corner of this typically chaotic capital
city, the expressionless face of President Joseph Kabila stares down
from a billboard urging patience and dialogue. “I launch a final appeal
to those who still hesitate to respond to the resounding call of their
homeland,” the sign reads in a veiled reference to the country’s
dangerous electoral impasse.
It might as well be the motto of Kabila’s government, which is widely
suspected of delaying electoral preparations as part of an evolving
ploy to remain in power. But judging by the government’s own actions,
which have grown increasingly paranoid and heavy-handed in recent
months, the motto hasn’t resonated much with the Congolese people.
A former Belgian colony the size of Western Europe, the Democratic Republic of the Congo has never in its history
had a peaceful transition of power. The country’s constitution, which
was drafted in the wake of a bloody wave of wars between 1996 and 2003,
calls for presidential elections in November — and bars Kabila, who has
already served two full terms in office, from standing as a candidate.
But while nominally preserving the appearance that they are getting
ready for the election, the president and his allies in government seem
to be preparing for something else entirely: the massive political
unrest that could erupt in the wake of a delayed or stolen vote.
“This constitution is a reply to multiple cycles of violence, and so
to want to ignore it would be to invite belligerence and encourage
people to take up arms and rebellion,” said Donatien Nshole Babula, the
first deputy secretary-general of Congo’s influential National Episcopal
Conference, which has called on Kabila to step aside at the end of his
term. “That is why we are calling on the politicians to listen to the
cries of the suffering of the people.”
Instead of listening, Kabila and his team have doubled down on their dangerous game of electoral delay, or glissement,
as the Congolese people call it, using the French world for “slippage.”
They insist that elections can’t happen in November because of
logistical and budgetary constraints; the voter registration rolls, for
example, haven’t been updated since 2011, meaning that an estimated 7 million new young voters would be excluded while millions of dead people would remain eligible.
But the political opposition says these claims are just a fig leaf
for stalling preparations, delaying elections, and clinging to power.
“The timetables put in place by the electoral commission are just
playing a game to allow Mr. Kabila to stay in power,” said prominent
Congolese opposition leader Martin Fayulu, who was briefly arrested in February after organizing demonstrations. “The people of Congo want Kabila gone. That’s why we will demonstrate. We don’t have anything else.”
Kabila’s bid to delay the election comes at the same time as a
growing number of leaders in the region have altered or ignored
constitutional term limits in order to remain in power. Last year, the
presidents of Rwanda and the Republic of Congo both orchestrated changes
to their constitutions to enable them to run for third terms; in
Burkina Faso and Burundi, violent protests broke out after the
presidents of those countries tried the same. Some Kabila allies have floated the possibility of a constitutional referendum in Congo, but the president himself has stayed silent on exactly when elections will happen.
In the meantime, there are worrying signs that Kabila and his
associates are readying themselves for a street fight. The government
recently imported new surveillance cameras from China, as well as
drones, anti-riot gear, water cannons, and tear gas from unnamed
parties. It claims that the new equipment will help it safely and
nonviolently disperse protests, but Congo’s security forces are not
known for their restraint. In January, for instance, protests against a
draft election law requiring a new census before presidential elections
are held — an endeavor that would take years in a massive,
infrastructure-poor country like Congo — provoked a violent crackdown in which more than 40 people were killed.
Hans Hoebeke, a researcher at the International Crisis Group focusing
on Congo, described the newly acquired crowd-control arsenal as part of
a larger attempt “to keep the senior levels of the army on the side of
regime” in the event of popular unrest. He cited gifts of expensive new
cars to top commanders as another facet of this strategy. Meanwhile, the
government has moved aggressively to silence its critics over the last
year, arresting Congolese activists and civil society leaders on dubious
charges. It has also denied visas to multiple foreign journalists, expelled noted Congo researcher Jason Stearns after he published a report linking the army to civilian massacres, and revoked the work permit of Ida Sawyer, a researcher for Human Rights Watch who has lived in Congo since 2008.
“I do think that Kabila and the people around him want to stay in
power, and I would say at whatever the cost,” Hoebeke said. “If he
leaves, the whole construction of the majority around him would
disintegrate.”
Kabila and his allies simply have too much to lose. They have amassed
millions of dollars from mining, trading, and other business ventures —
licit and illicit — that critics say are made possible by corruption at
all levels of government. Those who have prospered under Kabila may
fear prosecution once he’s gone.
“The big threat is Kabila and his people,” Fayulu said. “What they
are fearing is to lose the advantage. And then if they are not in power,
maybe someone will cut them or jail them.”
At the crumbling headquarters of the Independent National Electoral
Commission in Kinshasa, deputy spokesman Onésime Kukatula Falash
defended the government’s decision to delay the elections on budgetary
and logistical grounds. Seated in a large office adorned with two photos
of Kabila and a third of Kukatula Falash shaking hands with U.S. Sen.
John McCain, he said it would take around 16 months just to update the
voter registration rolls, citing a U.N. report that reached a similar
conclusion but estimated ten and a half months. In the meantime, Kabila
could legally remain in office, he said, citing a controversial decision
by Congo’s highest court that was delivered in May. (The court, whose
judges were handpicked by the president, ruled that Kabila could remain
in power until elections are held, regardless of the length of the
delay.)
“We have the constitution, which is covering everything, so I don’t
think people will take to the streets because of the articles of the
constitution,” Kukatula Falash said.
Leonnie Kandolo, a civil society and women’s rights activist in
Kinshasa, reads her copy of the constitution — which she always carries
in her purse — very differently. She said it’s clear that the Congolese
people want Kabila to go, but one question looms darkly: “If people
stand up and say no [to election delays], how are you [the government]
going to stop those people?” Kandolo asked, shaking her hands
exasperatedly. The answer, she feared, was force.
Kandolo was part of a monitoring team for the 2006 presidential
election, the country’s first after the war. Kabila, who had been in
power since the death of his father, President Laurent Kabila, in 2001,
won with 58 percent of the vote. But it was the 2011 vote that shattered
Kandolo’s faith in Congo’s political system. In a disputed election
that was denounced as flawed by international observers, Kabila narrowly
beat out longtime opposition leader Étienne Tshisekedi, who nonetheless
declared himself the winner. Demonstrations and repression followed,
and more than 20 people were killed, according to Human Rights Watch.
Many fear that electoral delays could precipitate something far worse
in the coming months. In July, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
warned in a report
to the Security Council that the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Congo was
developing contingency plans because the election impasse could
“degenerate into a severe crisis, with a high risk of relapse into
violence and instability.” Another report
released in June by the Inter-Agency Standing Committee, a group of
U.N. and non-U.N. humanitarian partners, put Congo at the top of a list
of worldwide risks to watch. In addition to delaying the vote, the
government is “likely to limit or shut down mobile networks, restrict
the opposition’s rights through legal or violent means and increase
intimidation and harassment,” the report said.
Reports like these make Kabila’s calls for dialogue ring hollow to many Congolese. But others are just as frustrated with the fragmented opposition, the majority of which has boycotted Kabila’s dialogues
and called for its own. Part of the problem is that the “leaders of
both sides see delaying elections as in their interest,” Stearns said.
Although the government clearly benefits from the delay because it gets
to remain in power, the opposition benefits as well — since it has a
clear issue around which to mobilize its supporters.
Still others are frustrated with the international community, which
many Congolese see as disinterested in Kabila’s efforts to subvert
democracy. The U.S. government has been vocally
critical of rising repression, including imposing sanctions on
Kinshasa’s police chief for “violence against civilians.” But it and other Western powers have stopped short of sanctioning Kabila and his allies over glissement.
“If this international community wants to stop or save us from this
war, instead of spending money on small, senseless projects, we should
pool the money to mobilize ourselves to organize elections,” said
Chrispin Mvano Ya Bauma, a Congolese journalist and researcher based in
the eastern city of Goma. “If these elections aren’t organized, we could
fall into war.”
http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/09/08/how-congos-president-plans-to-stay-in-power-joseph-kabila-elections-riots-glissement/
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