DRC poll delay triggers protests President Kabila
J0seph Kabila

J0seph Kabila

KINSHASA. — The Congolese capital Kinshasa was gripped by strike yesterday in a protest over plans by the president to stay in power beyond the end of his term in December, AFP journalists said.The opposition called for the action to protest a deal signed on Tuesday which would keep President Joseph Kabila in power in the Democratic Republic of Congo until April 2018 by postponing this year’s scheduled presidential vote.

President Kabila first took office in 2001, and in 2006 a new constitutional provision limited the presidency to a two-term limit which expires on December 20.

The country’s main opposition party, the UDPS, called the deal signed between authorities and fringe opposition groups a “flagrant violation” of the constitution and said the strike would show Kabila “the yellow card”.

At 09:00 local time, roads in northern parts of Kinshasa — a city of 10 million people — were totally deserted and most shops closed. They would typically have been bustling ahead of the work and school day.

The upmarket Gombe district was also unusually quiet.

And in Kasa-Vubu, a district in the south of the city, the only people on Victories Square were some 50 police officers.

Officers were deployed in force at other locations including parliament and at several military bases.

The only visible commercial activity taking place was women selling bread and petrol stations that were open but unused.

Despite the widespread strike action in Kinshasa, the situation was normal in the second city Lubumbashi. Calls for a strike were also ignored in Bukavu, according to an AFP correspondent there.

However in Goma, eastern DRC, the call to down tools was largely followed and most shops remained closed, according to two AFP journalists. — AFP.

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