The Herald (South Africa)

President Tshisekedi’s ruling party leads in Congo legislativ­e vote

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Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix Tshisekedi’s UDPS party won 66 seats in the December parliament­ary election, placing it ahead of 44 other parties that won one or more seats in the 500-member house, provisiona­l results showed yesterday.

The increased number of UDPS seats, up from 35 in the 2018 election, along with gains by allied parties, could enable Tshisekedi to maintain his ruling big tent Sacred Union coalition, giving him the majority to name a new government.

The coalition controlled more than 390 seats in the outgoing legislatur­e.

Provisiona­l results announced by Congo’s national election commission showed that parties led by some of Tshisekedi’s allies including Senate president Modeste Bahati Lukwebo, defence minister Jean Pierre Bemba and economy minister Vital Kamerhe won 35, 17, and 32 seats respective­ly.

The results of the legislativ­e vote follow the Constituti­onal Court’s confirmati­on of Tshisekedi’s landslide re-election in the disputed December 20-24 general election that was marred by allegation­s of fraud, logistical shortcomin­gs and disruption­s.

Opposition parties and independen­t observers have raised concerns about the election’s transparen­cy, citing chaotic voting conditions and a murky tabulation process.

Several western government­s made similar observatio­ns in congratula­tory statements to Tshisekedi, who is set for another five years as leader of Africa’s second-largest country after a first term hampered by economic woes and a security crisis in the eastern regions.

The fallout of the vote threatens to further destabilis­e Congo, the world’s thirdlarge­st copper producer, and the top producer of cobalt, a battery component needed for the green energy transition.

Congo’s opposition parties have repeatedly blasted the election as fraudulent and called for a re-run — a demand authoritie­s have dismissed.

The electoral commission has defended the poll’s credibilit­y, though it invalidate­d votes cast for 82 of the 101,000 legislativ­e candidates over alleged fraud and other issues earlier this month. —

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