deadly violence erupts as dr congo votes
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
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Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
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Deadly violence erupts as DR Congo votes

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Egypt Today, egypt today Deadly violence erupts as DR Congo votes

Kinshasa - AFP
Deadly violence rocked election day in the Democratic Republic of Congo as polling stations in the vast central African nation came under attack from gunmen and voters angry at long delays. The unrest cast a pall over the presidential and legislative elections as polls closed at 5:00 pm (1600 GMT) and counting began. Preliminary results in the presidential race are not expected until December 6, while national assembly results are due January 13. President Joseph Kabila, in power since 2001, is tipped to win a new five-year term running against a divided opposition field of 10 candidates, after parliament changed the constitution in January to scrap two-round elections in favour of a single-round, first-past-the-post system. Tensions flared early in the day as the flashpoint city of Lubumbashi, capital of the restive mining province of Katanga, erupted into violence with a series of attacks apparently carried out by separatist rebels. In the day's worst incident, gunmen opened fire on a polling station in the centre of the southeastern city, the country's second largest.  A poll worker said the men shouted "We have come to liberate you!" before killing two policemen at point blank range and a woman who was hit by a stray bullet. Armed men in Lubumbashi also launched a pre-dawn attack on a convoy of jeeps carrying election materials. Officials said seven or eight attackers were later tracked down by military and police and killed. Katanga governor Moise Katundi said the situation in the province was "under control". An ex-member of a separatist movement fighting for the province's independence told AFP by phone from South Africa that the group had carried out the attack to call for an independence referendum instead of "this vote that doesn't have anything to do with us in Katanga". In the central town of Kananga, a stronghold for veteran opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi, voters upset over voting delays and allegations of fraud torched a string of polling stations, stole ballots and blocked a truck from delivering election materials, a UN source said. In the capital Kinshasa, the day proceeded without major incident until police cars, two armoured vehicles and some 150 riot police blockaded a main road as Tshisekedi, Kabila's main rival, went to cast his ballot.  The opposition leader, who had thousands of supporters running behind him and hanging off the cars in his convoy, did a U-turn when he reached the barricade and was able to cast his ballot at another voting station just before polls closed. Afterwards he called for "pressure from the people and the international community" to investigate irregularities in the vote. The run-up to the presidential and parliamentary polls had already been marred by violence pitting Kabila's and Tshisekedi's supporters against each other. Tshisekedi's supporters also clashed with police Saturday in Kinshasa as officials banned candidates from holding their final rallies after violence that killed at least two people in unclear circumstances. Logistical headaches in organising the vote in a nation two-thirds the size of Western Europe, with a roads network that is crumbling and limited after seven years of war and decades of under-development, had raised fears the polls could be postponed. The elections are just the second since back-to-back wars from 1996 to 2003 in a country that remains one of the world's poorest despite its abundance of cobalt, copper, diamonds and gold. Voters interviewed at polling stations voiced frustration with their poverty. Two-thirds of the country's 67.8 million people live on less than $1.25 a day. "I'm 27 years old, I finished my studies in 2009 and I have no job," Arlette, who studied international law, told AFP at Saint George school in Kinshasa. "I struggle to eat. It's truly sad."
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deadly violence erupts as dr congo votes deadly violence erupts as dr congo votes



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