Felix Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo

Dave Evans

Regular
03/12/2024



Translated from French

Presidential 2023: The Case poll puts
@moise_katumbi in the lead with 62% of votes far ahead of Félix Tshisekedi
 
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Dave Evans

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03/12/2023
 
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Dave Evans

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05/11/2023
Cruiser Posted


Opposition candidates jostle for position before DRC election​

Contenders yet to unite around a single figure who could challenge incumbent Félix Tshisekedi

Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor
Mon 4 Dec 2023 16.30 AEDT

Africa’s fourth most populous country, the mineral-rich Democratic Republic of the Congo, goes to the polls in three weeks’ time with a civil war raging, two international peacekeeping forces starting to depart and an EU electoral observers’ mission quitting after the government refused to let them use their own satellite phones.

In a country with a history of stolen elections, the chances of preventing the incumbent president, Félix Tshisekedi, from securing a second five-year term turn on the ability of the diverse opposition to unite around a single credible candidate.

There are 24 candidates in the field, including Denis Mukwege, a Nobel peace prize-winning gynaecologist; Floribert Anzuluni, a banker turned grassroots activist; Aggrey Ngalasi, a pastor; Moïse Katumbi, who was barred from the country to prevent him from standing in the 2018 elections; and Martin Fayulu, a former oil executive from whom the presidency was widely seen to have been stolen in 2018.

There is only one woman in the contest, Marie-Josée Ifoku, who like almost all the candidates promises to tackle a predatory state.

Longstanding corruption surrounding diamonds in DRC has expanded into lithium and cobalt, the minerals necessary to power the green energy revolution.

A fragmented opposition in a single first-past-the-post ballot greatly favours the incumbent, so much so that Anzuluni claims 15 of the candidates were “created by the regime”.

He said: “It’s clear amongst the opposition we need to create a coalition, but the coalition has to share the same values and agree on a broad political programme that tackles a system in which the political actors see politics as a profit-making enterprise.” His consultations with civil society show security is voters’ top concern.

Talks were held in mid-November in Pretoria between a group of leading candidates to see if they could coalesce around a single figure, but so far no consensus exists.

The already fragile hopes that the poll on 20 December will be conducted lawfully were damaged last Tuesday when the EU announced it was withdrawing its 42-strong team of electoral experts. The mission, headed by a leftwing Swedish MEP, Malin Björk, had been seeking to bring in their own communications equipment and phones but the government said this breached a protocol.

Six of the leading opposition candidates had already complained about the proximity of the independent national electoral commission to Tshisekedi, as well as about delays in publishing voter rolls, a mass of defective identification cards, and a lack of police protection for their campaigns.

The commission is committed to publishing the results of the vote, polling station by polling station, a step that will make it easier for party election agents and a politically activist Catholic church to monitor the tallying process.

Voters have good reasons to be suspicious.

In the 2018 elections, an enthusiastic civil society seemed to have grabbed a chance to end the corruption by overwhelmingly rejecting the former president Joseph Kabila’s handpicked successor, Tshisekedi, and instead backing Fayulu.

However, after an apparent deal with Kabila, Tshisekedi was pronounced the winner. Fayalu’s efforts to declare the result invalid were fruitless.

The latest presidential election and local elections take place against the background of a surge in fighting in the east of the country, appalling exploitation in lucrative copper and cobalt mines and the imminent departure of two peacekeeping forces – the 15,000-strong UN peacekeeping operation Monuscu and a seven-nation East African Community force.

The EAC mandate is due to expire on Friday, barely a year after the force arrived on its first military intervention, leaving a potentially dangerous security vacuum. The first Kenyan forces in the EAC mission flew out of Goma at the weekend. Monuscu will be gone early in 2024.

Tshisekedi complained that the EAC was not acting on its mandate to force the armed groups present in the east, including the March 23 group, to lay down their arms. DRC is convinced that the M23 is funded and armed by Rwanda. Human Rights Watch has accused the M23 of numerous war crimes and has called for the organisation and any backers in Rwanda to be put on a UN sanctions list.

Fayalu and Katumbi are drawing probably the larger crowds among the contenders, but it is not clear if they would be allowed to win, or even if the elections will go ahead.

 
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Xerof

Biding my Time 1971
Fayalu and Katumbi are drawing probably the larger crowds among the contenders, but it is not clear if they would be allowed to win, or even if the elections will go ahead.

says it all really
 
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tolate

Emerged
05/11/2023
Cruiser Posted


Opposition candidates jostle for position before DRC election​

Contenders yet to unite around a single figure who could challenge incumbent Félix Tshisekedi

Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor
Mon 4 Dec 2023 16.30 AEDT

Africa’s fourth most populous country, the mineral-rich Democratic Republic of the Congo, goes to the polls in three weeks’ time with a civil war raging, two international peacekeeping forces starting to depart and an EU electoral observers’ mission quitting after the government refused to let them use their own satellite phones.

In a country with a history of stolen elections, the chances of preventing the incumbent president, Félix Tshisekedi, from securing a second five-year term turn on the ability of the diverse opposition to unite around a single credible candidate.

There are 24 candidates in the field, including Denis Mukwege, a Nobel peace prize-winning gynaecologist; Floribert Anzuluni, a banker turned grassroots activist; Aggrey Ngalasi, a pastor; Moïse Katumbi, who was barred from the country to prevent him from standing in the 2018 elections; and Martin Fayulu, a former oil executive from whom the presidency was widely seen to have been stolen in 2018.

There is only one woman in the contest, Marie-Josée Ifoku, who like almost all the candidates promises to tackle a predatory state.

Longstanding corruption surrounding diamonds in DRC has expanded into lithium and cobalt, the minerals necessary to power the green energy revolution.

A fragmented opposition in a single first-past-the-post ballot greatly favours the incumbent, so much so that Anzuluni claims 15 of the candidates were “created by the regime”.

He said: “It’s clear amongst the opposition we need to create a coalition, but the coalition has to share the same values and agree on a broad political programme that tackles a system in which the political actors see politics as a profit-making enterprise.” His consultations with civil society show security is voters’ top concern.

Talks were held in mid-November in Pretoria between a group of leading candidates to see if they could coalesce around a single figure, but so far no consensus exists.

The already fragile hopes that the poll on 20 December will be conducted lawfully were damaged last Tuesday when the EU announced it was withdrawing its 42-strong team of electoral experts. The mission, headed by a leftwing Swedish MEP, Malin Björk, had been seeking to bring in their own communications equipment and phones but the government said this breached a protocol.

Six of the leading opposition candidates had already complained about the proximity of the independent national electoral commission to Tshisekedi, as well as about delays in publishing voter rolls, a mass of defective identification cards, and a lack of police protection for their campaigns.

The commission is committed to publishing the results of the vote, polling station by polling station, a step that will make it easier for party election agents and a politically activist Catholic church to monitor the tallying process.

Voters have good reasons to be suspicious.

In the 2018 elections, an enthusiastic civil society seemed to have grabbed a chance to end the corruption by overwhelmingly rejecting the former president Joseph Kabila’s handpicked successor, Tshisekedi, and instead backing Fayulu.

However, after an apparent deal with Kabila, Tshisekedi was pronounced the winner. Fayalu’s efforts to declare the result invalid were fruitless.

The latest presidential election and local elections take place against the background of a surge in fighting in the east of the country, appalling exploitation in lucrative copper and cobalt mines and the imminent departure of two peacekeeping forces – the 15,000-strong UN peacekeeping operation Monuscu and a seven-nation East African Community force.

The EAC mandate is due to expire on Friday, barely a year after the force arrived on its first military intervention, leaving a potentially dangerous security vacuum. The first Kenyan forces in the EAC mission flew out of Goma at the weekend. Monuscu will be gone early in 2024.

Tshisekedi complained that the EAC was not acting on its mandate to force the armed groups present in the east, including the March 23 group, to lay down their arms. DRC is convinced that the M23 is funded and armed by Rwanda. Human Rights Watch has accused the M23 of numerous war crimes and has called for the organisation and any backers in Rwanda to be put on a UN sanctions list.

Fayalu and Katumbi are drawing probably the larger crowds among the contenders, but it is not clear if they would be allowed to win, or even if the elections will go ahead.

Just hope FELIX stays in power...imo
 

Winenut

Go AVZ!
I am increasingly of the view that FT is not good for AVZ

I know I'm being lazy but anyone know anything about Katumbi or have any feel for what he's about?
 
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Dave Evans

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20/12/2023
 

Dave Evans

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Dave Evans

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20/12/2023



IMG_5978.jpeg


Translated from French by
#RDC | Elections 2023 | Palpable proof of electoral fraud planned by the Sacred Union | Richard #Kompay Simay, PCA of the Geographical Institute of Congo and candidate #UDPS for the national legislative elections at #BandunduVille , surprised early this morning with electoral effects, in particular ballots already filled out and checked. Candidate Kompay (dressed in a green jersey) was arrested and taken aboard a police jeep. He was accompanied by two elements of the National Police #Vidéos
 
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Xerof

Biding my Time 1971
https://x.com/petertiani007/status/1737529358607073524?s=20


Urgent !! Urgent ! Big disappointment for the regime in place! Despite the disaster observed today during the votes, in several centers in the city of KINSHASA an opposition candidate beats the record, well ahead. Some CENI agents are asking for a break to check if there may be a malfunction reported by several CENI agents near PLAZZA IMMACULÉ in the commune of NSELE, Mont NGAFULA, NGALIEMA. others believe that only the photo of Candidate N•3 appears even when we click on other numbers. Admission of failure of the regime, flight forward. Wait and See!

What a fucking crock of shit
 
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cruiser51

Top 20
https://x.com/petertiani007/status/1737529358607073524?s=20


Urgent !! Urgent ! Big disappointment for the regime in place! Despite the disaster observed today during the votes, in several centers in the city of KINSHASA an opposition candidate beats the record, well ahead. Some CENI agents are asking for a break to check if there may be a malfunction reported by several CENI agents near PLAZZA IMMACULÉ in the commune of NSELE, Mont NGAFULA, NGALIEMA. others believe that only the photo of Candidate N•3 appears even when we click on other numbers. Admission of failure of the regime, flight forward. Wait and See!

What a fucking crock of shit
Candidate No. 3:

Screenshot 2023-12-21 at 4.39.33 pm.png
 
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Dave Evans

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21/12/2023

 
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cruiser51

Top 20
21/12/2023


I just hope the DRC has a fair and honest election, so the population finishes up with a leader of which they can proudly say: We elected this person to lead us for the next term.
 
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Dave Evans

Regular
26/12/2023
Carlos Posted


'The United States is prepared to turn a blind eye to hastily organized elections in the DRC, however contentious'

DR Congo presidential election: partial results give Tshisekedi a clear lead

The Democratic Republic of Congo's electoral commission (Céni) on Monday continued to release partial results from the December 20-21 presidential election, with incumbent leader Félix Tshisekedi leading by a wide margin -over 80% of the vote.


The results announced so far relate to 1,876,827 voters, out of a total of nearly 44 million registered in the vast country of around 100 million inhabitants.

At this stage of the vote count, according to the Céni, Félix Tshisekedi, who has been in power since the beginning of 2019 and is running for a second five-year term, has achieved a score of 81.4%.

He was followed by businessman and former governor of Katanga (southeast) Moïse Katumbi (15.18%) and the other opponent Martin Fayulu (1.2%). The twenty or so other candidates in the running, including Nobel Peace Prize winner Denis Mukwege, failed to reach 1%.

The Céni has not established the turnout rate, but has decided to gradually release the results of the presidential elections since Friday. These were held at the same time as the legislative, provincial and local elections, for which the results will be published at a later date.

The quadruple ballot had been scheduled for one day, the 20th, but was extended due to a number of logistical problems, officially by one day but extending into Christmas in some remote areas.

Opposition candidates have been denouncing the "chaos" and "irregularities" that marred the vote since the very first day.

Some are planning a demonstration for next Wednesday, while others are calling for the elections to be cancelled outright. The Catholic Archbishop of Kinshasa, Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo, described the elections as a "gigantic mess" during his Christmas mass on Sunday evening.

Like some fifteen embassies before him, the prelate called for "prudence and restraint" in a country with a troubled political history, often marked by violence, whose subsoil is immensely rich in minerals but whose population is predominantly poor.

 

Frank

Top 20
Presidential election in Katanga: Sama Lukonde, Ghislain Nyembo, Fifi Masuka, Dany Banza, Jacques Kyabula…unable to elect Félix Tshisekedi

1704237602093.jpeg


The detailed provisional results of the December 20 presidential election published by the Independent National Electoral Commission (CENI) expose the inability of certain executives of the Sacred Union to have Félix Tshisekedi elected in their respective corners.

According to the CENI table, Félix Tshisekedi, despite his 73.34% obtained throughout the country, was soundly beaten in the Katanga area.

His allies in Katanga, like Prime Minister Sama Lukonde, his Chief of Staff Ghislain Nyembo, Dany Banza, the governor of Lualaba Fifi Masuka, the governor of Haut-Katanga Kyabula Katwa, Fabien Mutomb and others were unable to reach the height of Moïse Katumbi.

And yet, we comment at the Sacred Union, all the people mentioned above are beneficiaries of interesting positions and advantages.

Unfortunately, they do not have the political weight to carry Félix Tshisekedi to their respective corners.


mediacongo


#Hmmm.jpg
 
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Dave Evans

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03/01/2023



Translation

KDM + 300 deputies: - Constitution. - Presidential term. - Appointments of provincial governors. - Prime Minister. - Presidency of the national assembly. - Senate Presidency.
 
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Dave Evans

Regular
05/01/2024



LITHIUM is today a strategic mineral, just like COBALT, in the energy transition. Our country has significant reserves in HAUT-LOMAMI and TANGANYIKA. It is very surprising to note the lack of interest given by the government to opening up these two entities (provinces acquired by the opposition), which are totally isolated.

However, the exploitation of this resource would make it possible to create a balance in terms of development. Between North Katanga (Haut Lomami, Tanganyika), landlocked and underdeveloped, and South Katanga (Lualaba and Haut-Katanga), already having momentum thanks to the exploitation of copper and cobalt. It should also be emphasized that during the 5 years of Tshisekedi's governance, the central government caused and maintained crises at the level of the institutions of these two lithium-rich provinces, thus making any possibility of takeoff impossible. What is behind this? It is enough to build roads, rehabilitate and strengthen the capacities of the MPIANA-MWANGA hydroelectric power station, as well as relaunch the project to build the coal-fired thermal power station in LUENA to allow the processing of lithium on site. that is to say in the two provinces, in order to stimulate development and create thousands of jobs for the benefit of indigenous people.



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Dave Evans

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05/01/2023

DRC: Who is the Prime Minister for this second term of Félix Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo?

1. Jean Michel Sama Lukonde
2. Jean Pierre Bemba
3. Vital Kemerhe
4. Modest Bahati Lukwebo
5. Jean Pierre Lihau 👇

 
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