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Government must ‘secure’ polls in key DR Congo vote due next month: UN envoy

| @indiablooms | Nov 14, 2018, at 09:59 am

New York, Nov 14 (IBNS): With key national elections due next month in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), armed groups in the east of the country still threaten to derail the vote, the top United Nations official in the country told the Security Council on Tuesday.

Leila Zerrougui, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for the DRC, said that the provinces of Tanganyika and South Kivu, and parts of North Kivu, are most at risk.

Armed group violence in these “key provinces” could affect the deployment of electoral material and prevent certain parts of the population from voting on 23 December, she said.

Her briefing came as news reports cited the collapse of a short-lived deal by opposition parties in DRC, to field a joint candidate to contest the presidential election, against the ruling coalition’s chosen candidate. President Joseph Kabila, who has been in power for 18 years, in ineligible to stand for a third-term according to existing constitutional rules.

“It will be especially important for the Government to take steps in the coming weeks to secure polls, particularly to ensure the participation of women, who make up 50 per cent of registered voters,” urged Zerrougui.

Alongside, efforts to ensure credibility of the polls are equally important, she added, highlighting that candidates must have equal access to political space during the campaign period and that restrictions on peaceful demonstrations must be lifted consistently throughout the country.

A “level political playing field” will significantly enhance the credibility of polls, and contribute to post-electoral stability, expressed the senior UN official.

Ebola response

In her briefing, Ms. Zerrougui, who also heads the UN peacekeeping mission in the country, MONUSCO, said that armed group activity is also hampering the response to a deadly Ebola outbreak in the country’s northeast.

“We are still seeing a growing number of cases in the major population centres of Beni and Butembo and significant community resistance to response efforts,” she said, noting that women are disproportionately affected, representing about 60% of all probable and confirmed cases.

This was due to a number of factors, including their roles as caregivers of the diseased, she explained, noting that MONUSCO will continue to support Ebola response “as a matter of utmost priority, taking into account a gendered-response lens.”

Zerrougui also informed the Security Council that refugees, forced to return to DRC from Angola, continue to face challenges going back to their homes, including due to the pace of returns and the limited capacity to receive them.

“There is the possibility for ethnic tension to flare up in certain areas of the Kasais,” she added, noting that despite the remoteness of the area and the a very limited presence of MONUSCO, the UN mission has been supporting to relief partners and engaging with Congolese and regional actors to advocate for a more measured pace of return.

MONUSCO/Mamadou Alain Coulibaly

 

 

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