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Congo Election: Violence Feared Ahead Of Elections

Congo Elections

By SALEH MWANAMILONGO and MICHELLE FAUL   11/21/11 09:46 AM ET   AP

KINSHASA, Congo -- One leading opposition candidate already has proclaimed himself president. Police have fired live bullets into the air at protests. And rebels in the country's violence-wracked east have been burning voter cards to keep people from going to the polls.

The outcome of Congo's Nov. 28 presidential election is almost certain to keep President Joseph Kabila in power, but so too is the likelihood it will bring more chaos to sub-Saharan Africa's largest nation.

How the elections unfold will be a likely indicator of whether Congo is consolidating its fledgling democracy or returning to a state of widespread instability after decades of dictatorship and civil war, according to the International Crisis Group.

Western nations have spent billions of dollars trying to stabilize this vast mineral-rich nation, where China also has massively invested in recent years.

But already human rights groups are expressing fears about an atmosphere of spiraling violence and hate speech ahead of the vote. New York-based Human Rights Watch said it has documented dozens of cases, including one targeting supporters from leading opposition candidate Etienne Tshisekedi's province.

"There are too many mosquitoes in the living room. Now is the time to apply insecticide," Gabriel Kyungu, a Kabila ally, was quoted as saying. Kyungu, who is president of the Katanga provincial assembly, has denied the accusation.

Next week's vote also comes as large-scale impunity continues to plague the Central African country. Among those running for legislative office is Ntabo Ntaberi Sheka, an eastern militia commander accused of ordering the rapes of hundreds of women last year.

"Congolese authorities should be arresting Sheka for mass rape whether he is running for office or not," Human Rights Watch said. "The failure to arrest someone who is out publicly campaigning for votes sends a message that even the most egregious crimes will go unpunished."

An estimated 5 million people died in back-to-back wars in Congo that began as a spillover from Rwanda's 1994 genocide. The fighting continued until 2003, and drew in the armies of a half dozen nations in what became a scramble for Congo's vast mineral resources.

Kabila became president after his father's 2001 assassination and won a landmark 2006 vote that was largely run by the United Nations, which still has some 19,000 peacekeepers here nearly a decade after civil war ended.

Since then, Kabila has pushed electoral reforms though parliament that include only one round of voting for the presidential ballot, instead of two. Opposition parties acknowledge that their only chance of beating the incumbent in this scenario is to field one common candidate, but egos and political ambitions have prevented them from agreement.

Eleven candidates are running for president, and opposition politicians charge the electoral commission is biased toward Kabila. Tshisekedi, the leading opponent, has resorted to inciting his supporters to stage jailbreaks to free detained supporters.

The elections are already taking place amid significant unrest in the country's east, where dozens of militia groups and rebels continue to terrorize people. Government soldiers and rebels have brutally raped women, men and children, and burned down villages. Hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to flee their homes because of violence.

The fighting is fueled by the competition to control mines, many operated by soldiers, rebels and militiamen who use the minerals to fund their armed groups.

Kabila swept the vote in the east during the last elections, but his inability to bring peace to the region has cost him support as did his invitation for much-hated Rwandan troops to return there during 2009 in a failed attempt to stamp out Rwandan rebels wreaking havoc inside Congo.

On the development front, Kabila has negotiated a massive, $6-billion barter deal with China, trading some of Congo's minerals for infrastructure including roads, railways, hospitals and bridges in the country where most transport is by river or air. Congo sprawls across an area the size of Western Europe in the heart of Africa and neighbors nine other countries.

But Kabila has done little to fulfill promises to bring transparency and end the endemic corruption that riddles business in Congo. His is the only well-funded electoral campaign and some are pointing to a murky deal in which the state copper and cobalt miner Gecamines is said to have sold assets at billions less than they were worth. No one will say how much the mines' assets have been sold for, nor what has happened to the money.

A U.N. report on election violence blames most on a crackdown imposed by politically manipulated police, intelligence agents and justice officials. Information Minister Lambert Mende said the report was trying to make martyrs of the opposition.

"A trend seems to be emerging wherein parties are targeted more often in regions where they have significant numbers of followers and are predicted to be the biggest threat against the ruling majority and the president," the U.N. report said.

It warned that continued repression and rights abuses "may increase the likelihood of individuals and political parties resorting to violent means, endanger the democratic process and lead to post-electoral violence."

___

Faul reported from Johannesburg.

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KINSHASA, Congo -- One leading opposition candidate already has proclaimed himself president. Police have fired live bullets into the air at protests. And rebels in the country's violence-wracked east...
KINSHASA, Congo -- One leading opposition candidate already has proclaimed himself president. Police have fired live bullets into the air at protests. And rebels in the country's violence-wracked east...
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04:47 PM on 11/22/2011
This all started with the mass exodus of the colonial powers. When Britain, Germany, France, Denmark, and Portgual granted the African countries their independence, they chose to draw borders that split friendly tribes and put together feuding tribes (example: Hutus and Tutus in Rwanda) on purpose so that they would focus on fighting. This is exactly what the colonizing countries want in order to continue to rape Africa of its natural resources.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
abuckley23
Visit me at Planet Kibi!! Google it!
04:24 PM on 11/22/2011
Mass rapist? If it looks like a politician and it walks like a politician...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lamarlord7
04:02 PM on 11/22/2011
If you're not familiar, nor really care about Africans or African people don't waste time with a meaningless or bigoted opinion. FYI if anyone cares all of the attempts at stabilization were just EU and America trying to stabilize their own financial interests.
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Leon Engelun
12:03 PM on 11/22/2011
even if they arrest one guy I am sure there will be a whole bunch of people who will still rape and do injustices to the women. It ain't like one guy raped a million women.
01:44 PM on 11/22/2011
When that one guy might hold a government office it sends a message of authorized brutality.
11:38 AM on 11/22/2011
Oh, no worries everyone. Ocampo is watching. Like in Lybia.
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valluhree
A progressive in Texas.
12:48 PM on 11/22/2011
When you mispell names in an attempt to make fun of the person, it actually just makes you look uneducated. Just thought I'd let you know.
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04:43 PM on 11/22/2011
Thank you.
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FromMarineToCop
Anything I've done already, I would do again
11:24 AM on 11/22/2011
I spent a short amount of time there a few years ago. As beautiful as it is, it's also a scary place to be.

The women are seriously mistreated. Sad.
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Shandra Brown Valyear
Political Addict
09:58 AM on 11/22/2011
I am appalled at the comments here that are joking about rape! Whether it is the US, the Congo or any other part of the world it is deplorable. Why do people continue to avoid the correlation of rape and the oppression of women everywhere? This has been happening to women for centuries around the world and yet it is still tolerated. When it happens in another country people ignore it. Ignoring these atrocities condones them. Speak up and stand for what is right!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Pool Guy
Common Sense & Sarcasm used for communication
08:58 AM on 11/22/2011
Wow kind of like our inner cities but bigger.
09:08 AM on 11/22/2011
Kind of like all of your country. Americans kill and brutalize people better than anybody.
10:06 AM on 11/22/2011
Even better than Mexico? Iran? Saudi Arbia? I seem to remember videos of people getting their heards sawed off with dull knives by Muslims
08:35 AM on 11/22/2011
all you people who blame everything on the President are truly pathetic.here is a story about what is happening in Africa and right away you blame the President.the real reason we don't do anything about the situation is because we as a nation don't really care,and that is the sad part.
08:03 AM on 11/22/2011
but i loved that movie.. Congo.. Ernie Hudson was great!!
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acarioti
Al Carioti is a Real Estate Broker in Orlando, Flo
07:05 AM on 11/22/2011
Interesting Nation they got there.
04:49 AM on 11/22/2011
Wait until we start importing these people in numbers we can bearly count and the Aids and HIV population in America outgrows the non, and the medical costs collapse our system.
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Blaze Burton
Who are you to judge the way i live? I know im not
12:52 PM on 11/22/2011
kind of like who it is with all these boomers retiring in droves? its already happening and its called old age
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cheaptrick00
socialism = spending OTHERS money!!!
04:49 AM on 11/22/2011
mass rape?? Is this guy running for president of the U.S.A. ??
04:47 AM on 11/22/2011
Ah yes ...those with the greatest tans are doing the littlest towards democracy. But wait ...we can blame our failure on the white man ...they do with amazing success in America.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Blaze Burton
Who are you to judge the way i live? I know im not
12:55 PM on 11/22/2011
historicly yes white guys have been the, rapist, genocidal, slave owners considering american was founded on it i think its a historicly accurate assumtion
04:28 PM on 11/22/2011
Your response is very uneducated. Rape, genocide and slavery has no boundaries to race no more than the fact that any race can be raped, murdered or enslaved. Wars large that enveloped the World such as WWI & WWII or small by tribal bands around the world have all included rape and genocide. Let's not leave religion out of this equation either. The human animal lives in each of us and war releases this vial animal.

http://library.thinkquest.org/C002739/AfricaSite/lmslaveryintro.htm




"slavery was practiced all over Africa: in many areas there were large-scale slave societies, while in others there were slave-owning societies".
03:02 AM on 11/22/2011
Read The Coming Anarchy - this book provides details on whats going in Africa, specifically the Congo, Ivory Coast etc. The boundries of the countries that we see on a map are justs lines and hold no meaning. We see it in the news armies made up of children taken from parents, no moral teachings, they don;t know right from wrong, survival at all costs. Population explosions, AIDS, Malaria etc Shanty towns that make Rio look nice.