DR Congo PM resigns under power-sharing deal with opposition

Apr 08, 2017

Kabila had announced in a speech Wednesday that he would name a new prime minister "within 48 hours" and urged the opposition "to overcome its internal squabbles" and hand him a list of candidates for the post of prime minister.

Congolese Prime Minister Samy Badibanga (pictured) resigned on April 7, 2017 as part of a power-sharing deal brokered by President Joseph Kabila with the opposition. Photo/AFP

Congolese Prime Minister Samy Badibanga formally resigned on Friday, two days after President Joseph Kabila pledged to appoint a new prime minister under a stalled power-sharing agreement with the opposition.

"The premier tendered his resignation to the president at 1:00 pm" (1200 GMT), a source in the prime minister's office told AFP. "The president took note of it and told him to handle all current business."

A cabinet spokesman confirmed Badibanga's resignation.

Kabila had announced in a speech Wednesday that he would name a new prime minister "within 48 hours" and urged the opposition "to overcome its internal squabbles" and hand him a list of candidates for the post of prime minister.

The appointment of a new premier is part of a deal brokered by the influential Catholic church on New Year's Eve, which aimed to avoid a full-blown crisis in the central African country after Kabila refused to step down when his second and final five-year term ended in December.

The agreement would allow Kabila, 45, to remain in office until elections in late 2017, ruling in tandem with a transitional watchdog and a new premier, to be chosen from within the opposition ranks.

The transitional watchdog was to have been headed by veteran opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi, who had gathered together an opposition coalition called "Rassemblement" (Unity), but died in early February.

Violence has flared across the central African country of 71 million people in recent months amid fears of a continued delay in this year's promised elections.

The country, which suffered through two wars between 1996 and 2003, has not had a democratic transition of power since its independence from Belgium in 1960.

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