DR Congo police disperse protest over election law

Jan 13, 2015

Police in the Democratic Republic of Congo''s capital Kinshasa used tear gas Monday to disperse more than 300 people protesting against a new electoral law before parliament.

Police in the Democratic Republic of Congo's capital Kinshasa used tear gas Monday to disperse more than 300 people protesting against a new electoral law before parliament.

The main opposition parties issued the call for the rally as parliament prepared to debate the legislation. They believe that the real aim of the new measures is to keep President Joseph Kabila in power after his mandate expires in 2016.

Kabila's regime seeks to make the staging of the presidential and parliamentary elections, which must be held by the end of 2016, contingent on the outcome of a census planned to start this year in the vast central African country.

This would postpone the polls by at least two years and keep Kabila in office for more than 15 years, according both to the opposition and to regional analysts.

About 30 riot police fired tear-gas canisters into the crowd at around 11:40 am (10:40 GMT), forcing demonstrators to run for shelter in the offices of opposition parties near the parliament building, AFP correspondents witnessed.

Clashes broke out at midday in front of the headquarters of the Union for the Congolese Nation (UNC). Youths set tyres ablaze and police responded with more tear gas aimed at them and inside the premises of the third largest opposition party.

Shortly afterwards, Kinshasa's police chief, General Celestin Kanyama, arrived on the scene accompanied by police reinforcements packed into about a dozen jeeps.

Parliament, known as the People's Palace, was cordoned off by security forces ahead of the start of the debate set to start in the afternoon on the proposal to change the electoral law presented by the government a week earlier.

 

 

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