Congo's Ruling Coalition Wins Landslide in Vote for Governors

by Bloomberg News
  • Candidates from the ruling party in the Democratic Republic of Congo were elected on Saturday as governors and deputy...
Congo's Ruling Coalition Wins Landslide in Vote for Governors

Candidates from the ruling party in the Democratic Republic of Congo were elected on Saturday as governors and deputy governors in 14 of the nation’s 21 newly drawn provinces.

The ruling coalition, known as the Presidential Majority, won in all but five of the new provinces, said the Independent National Electoral Commission, or CENI, in a statement e-mailed from the capital, Kinshasa. The vote in Sud Ubangui province was delayed and in Nord Ubangui province extended to a second round runoff, CENI said.

The indirect ballot, in which governors and deputy governors are elected by
provincial assemblies, was due to be held in October but was delayed. The vote is part of a series of about a dozen elections originally scheduled to take place between October 2015 and November 2016, culminating in a planned vote for a new president.

Congo’s opposition says that the postponement of the gubernatorial election and other votes is part of a ruling party strategy to delay elections and allow President Joseph Kabila to hold on to power.

New provincial boundaries were drawn up in July, when the country’s 11 administrative regions were divided into 26. The decentralization process was outlined in the 2006 constitution, though Kabila only ordered its implementation a year ago. Since a Constitutional Court ruling in September that the government could take “exceptional measures” to maintain “peace and security” in the new provinces, they had been run by directly appointed special commissioners.

Richard Muyej, the country’s former interior minister, was elected as governor of Lualaba province in the copper-producing region of Katanga, where Freeport McMoran and Glencore Plc both control major mining projects. Since September Muyej has served as special commissioner for the province.

Congo is Africa’s biggest producer of copper and tin, the world’s largest source of cobalt and a major exporter of gold.

To contact the reporter on this story: Tom Wilson in Kinshasa at twilson128@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Paul Richardson at pmrichardson@bloomberg.net, Ros Krasny, Stephen West

By: Tom Wilson

©2016 Bloomberg News

Candidates from the ruling party in the Democratic Republic of Congo were elected on Saturday as governors and deputy governors in 14 of the nation’s 21 newly drawn provinces.

The ruling coalition, known as the Presidential Majority, won in all but five of the new provinces, said the Independent National Electoral Commission, or CENI, in a statement e-mailed from the capital, Kinshasa. The vote in Sud Ubangui province was delayed and in Nord Ubangui province extended to a second round runoff, CENI said.

The indirect ballot, in which governors and deputy governors are elected by
provincial assemblies, was due to be held in October but was delayed. The vote is part of a series of about a dozen elections originally scheduled to take place between October 2015 and November 2016, culminating in a planned vote for a new president.

Congo’s opposition says that the postponement of the gubernatorial election and other votes is part of a ruling party strategy to delay elections and allow President Joseph Kabila to hold on to power.

New provincial boundaries were drawn up in July, when the country’s 11 administrative regions were divided into 26. The decentralization process was outlined in the 2006 constitution, though Kabila only ordered its implementation a year ago. Since a Constitutional Court ruling in September that the government could take “exceptional measures” to maintain “peace and security” in the new provinces, they had been run by directly appointed special commissioners.

Richard Muyej, the country’s former interior minister, was elected as governor of Lualaba province in the copper-producing region of Katanga, where Freeport McMoran and Glencore Plc both control major mining projects. Since September Muyej has served as special commissioner for the province.

Congo is Africa’s biggest producer of copper and tin, the world’s largest source of cobalt and a major exporter of gold.

To contact the reporter on this story: Tom Wilson in Kinshasa at twilson128@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Paul Richardson at pmrichardson@bloomberg.net, Ros Krasny, Stephen West

By: Tom Wilson

©2016 Bloomberg News

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