Kinshasa: People in Congo have begun voting in a long-delayed presidential election that could bring the troubled country’s first peaceful, democratic transfer of power. Some unrest is feared in the election after a last-minute decision to bar an estimated one million people from voting because of a deadly Ebola virus outbreak in the country’s east. The decision has been widely criticised as threatening the credibility of the election.
Two main opposition candidates, Martin Fayulu and Felix Tshisekedi, are challenging President Joseph Kabila’s preferred successor, former interior minister Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary, who is under sanctions from the European Union. Amid rainy weather in the capital, Kinshasa, Kabila and Shadary voted at the central Gombe Institute polling station.
“My message today to my compatriots is to come and vote for their candidates and brave the rain,” said Kabila, after voting. Shadary called for “peace and calm”, adding, “I am very confident in victory because the Congolese people will trust me, I campaigned all over the country.”