Jump to navigation

Congo-Kinshasa

Violence in the east is escalating and threatening the elections

President Tshisekedi is campaigning against Rwanda's proxy militia but the clashes are spinning out of control

Last week's decision by the East African Community (EAC) to extend the mandate of its regional military force in eastern Congo-Kinshasa could lead to December's presidential elections being delayed (AC Vol 63 No 24, Scrambling for a Pax Swahili).

Known as the East African Community Regional Force (EACRF), it was meant to face down militias in Congo-Kinshasa's eastern provinces, specifically fighters from the M23 military, widely reported to backed by Rwanda.

Although President Félix Tshisekedi been ramping nationalist rhetoric against Rwanda as part of his election campaigning and initially supported the deployment of the force, he now sees it as an irritant.

Extending the force's mandate, due to expire on 8 September, to 8 December was agreed by East African leaders in the absence of President Tshisekedi.

In May, Tshisekedi, who is running for a second term, extended the Kenya-led force's mandate to September but insisted that a second extension would be based on his assessment of the force's performance.

The recent upsurge in violence in the east, where over 120 armed groups operate, including the Rwanda-linked M23, complicates the organisations of elections on 20 December. In present conditions, it would be nigh-on impossible to organise credible elections in much of the east of the country.

For many Congolese, the occupation of their eastern provinces by regional soldiers is the latest act in a history of foreign meddling dating back to the assassination of Patrice Lumumba.

And the killing of around 50 people by security forces in the week ending 9 September after protests in Goma against UN peacekeepers and EACRF soldiers has prompted more public anger. Tshisekedi said that it could 'only be the subject of strong disapproval and condemnation'.

Opposition leaders such as Martin Fayulu, regarded by many as the rightful winner of the 2019 presidential election, are seeking to make political capital out of the EACRF's unpopularity with civilians.

In recent weeks, Fayulu, Moïse Katumbi, and other opposition leaders and their supporters, have been banned from gathering to protest outside the electoral commission in Kinshasa, in response to what they described as 'the chaotic electoral process.'



Related Articles

Scrambling for a Pax Swahili

Kenya's entry into the Congolese crucible is driven more by hopes of diplomatic and commercial gains than military adventurism

It is hanging by a thread. A truce, signed in Luanda with only the tacit participation of the principal antagonist, guaranteed by a phone call between Kenya's former...


Throwing out the neighbours

A spree of mutual expulsions disguises long-standing economic disputes

The two big neighbours have been busily expelling each others' nationals and the resulting tension hides their disagreements about oil, diamonds and the hoped-for electric power from a...


New fingers on Zaïre's trigger

Ending Mobutuism has divided Africa and its allies; the new government will need broad-based support to move ahead

The shape of Africa resembles a revolver, wrote Algeria's Franz Fanon, 'and Zaïre is the trigger'. Over 30 years after Fanon's assessment, new fingers are on the trigger...


Kabila corners Tshisekedi

The ex-president may have left the official residence but he now has the power to remove his successor at will

Elections to fill the 108 seats of Congo-Kinshasa's senate have delivered Joseph Kabila's political coalition a decisive majority in the upper house and handed him the power to...