Tuesday 20 December 2011

DR Congo's President Joseph Kabila to be sworn in

DR Congo's President Joseph Kabila to be sworn in

Women walk pass a tank in Kinshasa on 19 December 2011 Security is tight in Kinshasa, which is seen as an opposition stronghold
Tanks have been deployed in Kinshasa in case of opposition protests as Joseph Kabila prepares to be sworn in for a second term as Democratic Republic of Congo's president.
The Supreme Court has confirmed that Mr Kabila, 40, gained the most votes in the November election.
But observers have criticised the poll and opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi, 79, has declared himself president.
He says he will be sworn in on Friday.
The elections were the first Congolese-organised polls since the end of a devastating war in 2003 which left some four million people dead.
Mr Tshisekedi, who enjoys strong support in the capital, Kinshasa, has called on civil servants and the security forces to take orders from him, rather than Mr Kabila.
He said he was offering a reward for the capture of Mr Kabila.
An aide of Mr Kabila said the call was "criminal".
The BBC's Thomas Hubert in Kinshasa says Mr Kabila's Republican Guard has deployed tanks across the city ahead of his swearing-in ceremony.
Mugabe expected They are also positioned at Martyrs Stadium, where Mr Tshisekedi's supporters plan to inaugurate him as president on Friday.

Who is Joseph Kabila?

Supporters of incumbent President Joseph Kabila celebrate his re-election as President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo in December 10, 2011 Goma.
  • 40 years old
  • Born in a rebel camp in eastern DR Congo - where he enjoys most of his support
  • Spent his childhood in Tanzania
  • His father, Laurent Kabila, overthrew long-time ruler Mobutu Sese Seko in 1997
  • He first became president after his father's assassination in 2001
  • Oversaw the signing of a peace accord in 2002 to end a five-year conflict involving several other nations
  • Became DR Congo's first freely elected leader in 2006, winning a run-off poll with 58% of the vote
  • His campaign slogan was: "Five building sites of the republic"
  • Shies away from public speaking
  • Is married with one daughter and one son
Following the criticism of the election, Mr Kabila's aides have confirmed the attendance of only a handful of African heads of state for his inauguration - Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe, Gabon's Ali Bongo, Togo's Faure Gnassingbe and Congo-Brazzaville's Denis Sassou Nguesso.
Regional powerhouse South Africa is sending its foreign minister, Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, after describing the elections as "generally OK".
The foreign minister of former colonial power Belgium has cancelled plans to attend the ceremony. Congolese affairs analyst Theodore Trefon says that Western nations often follow Belgium's diplomatic lead over DR Congo.
Mr Tshisekedi led the campaign for democracy under former leader Mobutu Sese Seko but these were the first elections he has contested.
He boycotted the last poll in 2006, organised under the auspices of the United Nations, after claiming they had been rigged in advance.
As well as Kinshasa, he also enjoys a lot of support in the diamond-rich, central area of Kasai.
Mr Kabila has promised to use his second term to focus on "five building sites of the republic": Infrastructure; health and education; water and electricity; housing and employment.
DR Congo is two-thirds the size of Western Europe and is rich in minerals, such as gold and coltan used in mobile phones but it has hardly any roads or railways. After years of mismanagement and conflict, living standards in the country were recently found to be the lowest of 187 countries surveyed by the UN.
Mr Kabila has been president since 2001 following the assassination of his father, Laurent.
Last week, Mr Kabila admitted there had been mistakes in the election process but said no poll was 100% perfect and he rejected concerns that the results lacked credibility.
The US-based Carter Center, which sent observers to the election, said the vote was too flawed to be credible.
The US state department called for a review of irregularities and the EU described parts of the election process as "chaotic".
However, the African Union described the elections as a success.
Inside DR Congo
size map The Democratic Republic of Congo covers 2,344,858 square km of land in the centre of Africa, making it the 12th largest country in the world.

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