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27 Dec 2018 | 09:10 AM UTC

DRC: Ongoing protest in Beni December 27 /update 5

Ongoing protest in Beni December 27 following announcement of election delay in Beni, Butembo, and Yumbi until next March; avoid all gatherings

Warning

Event

As of Thursday, December 27, supporters of the LUCHA civil society group are protesting in the town of Beni to denounce the postponement of presidential and legislative elections in Beni and Butembo (North Kivu province; east) due to an ongoing Ebola outbreak, as well as in Yumbi (Mai-Ndombe province; southwest) due to recent intercommunal clashes that left 100 people dead. due to recent intercommunal clashes that left 100 people dead. Protesters are expected to march towards the local Independent National Electoral Commission (CENI) building. Protests are also likely to take place in Butembo and Goma. A heightened security presence is likely around any demonstration. Clashes between supporters and security forces cannot be ruled out.

On a related note, in anticipation of unrest surrounding the presidential election, the US and UK governments have already ordered all non-emergency personnel to depart the country and are continuing to advise their respective citizens to avoid nonessential travel to the DRC until the situation stabilizes. Remaining US government employees in the DRC are subject to a nightly curfew from 19:00 to 06:00 until further notice.

Context

The CENI announced on December 20, that general elections (including the presidential vote) originally scheduled for December 23, were delayed to December 30, notably due to a fire that reportedly destroyed 80 percent of the voting machines in Kinshasa on December 13, as well as recent violence in southwestern parts of the country and an ongoing Ebola outbreak in the east. On December 26, the CENI announced that the elections had been delayed until next March in the three abovementioned cities. The long-awaited presidential and legislative elections would mark the first democratic transfer of power since independence in 1960.

As a security precaution, Congolese authorities had previously announced that land borders would close for 24 hours on election day and an increased security presence would be deployed throughout major urban centers and at polling stations on the day of the vote; it is currently unclear whether these security measures will remain in effect this weekend despite the delayed elections. Multiple clashes have erupted during political events held ahead of the elections, notably in Kalemie, Lubumbashi, Tshikapa, Kindu, and Mbuji-Mayi. At least seven people have reportedly been killed by security forces over the course of the campaign period.

President Joseph Kabila, whose term ended in 2016 but who has remained in power amid repeated election delays, has endorsed Interior Minister Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary as the candidate of the ruling FCC (Front Commun pour le Congo) coalition. Other main candidates include Felix Tshisekedi of the CACH (Cap pour le Changement) opposition coalition party and Martin Fayulu of the Lamuka opposition coalition.

Advice

Individuals in the DRC are advised to monitor the political situation, avoid all protests and political demonstrations due to the risk of violence and arrest, adhere to instructions issued by local authorities and their home governments, and refrain from discussing sensitive political topics in public.