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DRC President Felix Tshisekedi Declared Winner of Disputed Election


FILE - Democratic Republic of the Congo President Felix Tshiseked speaks to supporters during a campaign rally at Sainte Therese in the Ndjili district of Kinshasa on December 18, 2023.
FILE - Democratic Republic of the Congo President Felix Tshiseked speaks to supporters during a campaign rally at Sainte Therese in the Ndjili district of Kinshasa on December 18, 2023.

KINSHASA — Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix Tshisekedi won reelection with more than 70% of the vote, the country's election commission said Sunday.

The preliminary results of the December 20 election were announced in the capital, Kinshasa, amid demands from the opposition and some civil society groups for the vote to be rerun due to massive logistical problems that put the validity of the outcome into question.

Tshisekedi was followed by businessman Moise Katumbi, who received 18% of the vote, and Martin Fayulu, who received 5%. Nobel Peace Prize winner Denis Mukwege, a physician renowned for treating women brutalized by sexual violence in eastern DRC, got less than 1%.

The election had more than a 40% turnout with some 18 million people voting. The results will be sent to the constitutional court for confirmation, election chief Denis Kadima said.

FILE - Voters queue outside a polling station during the presidential elections in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, December 20, 2023.
FILE - Voters queue outside a polling station during the presidential elections in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, December 20, 2023.

Opposition candidates opposing the results have two days to submit their claims, and the constitutional court then has seven days to decide. The final results are expected on January 10, and the president is scheduled to be sworn in at the end of that month.

DRC has a history of disputed elections that can turn violent, and there’s little confidence among many Congolese in the country’s institutions. Before the results were announced Sunday, opposition candidates, including Katumbi, said they rejected the results and called on the population to mobilize.

The logistical problems included many polling stations being late in opening or not opening at all. Some lacked materials, and many voter cards had smudged ink that made them illegible.

Voting in the election had to be extended into a second day— something local observers and civil society organizations have called illegal — and parts of the country were still casting ballots five days after election day.

“If a foreign country considers these elections to be elections, there’s a problem,” Fayulu said at a news conference in the capital Sunday before the results were announced. “It’s a farce, don’t accept (the results).”

Earlier this week, clashes erupted between some of Fayulu’s supporters and police officers who fired tear gas at protesters who threw rocks and barricaded themselves inside the opposition headquarters.

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