Squealing mice
and rats ran around the room, as well as squeaking bats that sounded like Punch
laughing, as I tried to get a few hours’ sleep in a remote parish house during
my 25 hour river journey to Mbandaka on the River Congo. At least I had a
mosquito net to keep them out of my bed – but sleep was slow in coming. We
watched a distant tropical storm, but because of reports of bandits on the
river’s approach to Mbandaka, and subsequent military patrols, we were advised
to take a break for a few hours and continue at one o’clock in the morning.
I arrived in
Mbandaka and heard that a small boat carrying money for the people working to
register voters, in the interior, for the elections, had been attacked, robbed
and all six people on board had been killed.
From Mbandaka
I took a plane to Congo’s capital, Kinshasa ... and followed the preparations
for this year’s supposed general election. The president’s mandate ended last
year.
“The latest
technology will provide each citizen with a biometric voting card ...” said the
man on the television, in Kinshasa. They then showed a woman giving her details
as someone slowly typed them into a laptop. That done, he was able to push out
the printed card from a large square of plastic. The woman was ready for the
election!
However,
Lilianna, a friend’s daughter in Kinshasa, found the reality quite different. She
set off with a friend at five in the morning to the local church hall. She was
given a number, 67, waited all day, outside in the scorching sun ... and then
told to come back the following day. I asked her if she would try again the
following day. “Yes,” she said, “It’s important to register to vote, but today
there was only one person with one computer processing applications. Only
twenty people managed to get their cards all day.” Lilianna returned early the
next day and was given a new number, this time 177! She went home to wait and
returned to the hall at 3 pm; there was nobody there! She, like many others, is
still not registered.
Lillianna, ready to register as a voter in the General Election |
Since the
brutal repression of street protests in Kinshasa, and elsewhere in the Congo,
last September and December, another phenomenon has further aggravated the population.
The value of the local currency, the Congolese Franc, has lost half of its value.
Prices have doubled. Rents and imported goods are set in US dollars; a lot of
people are going hungry and unable to pay the rent for their houses.
I met Lilianna
again a few days later. “We are more than seven months on from the President’s
promise of elections,” she sighed. “People assume they’ll take place this
December. What is clear to me is that there’ll be no elections this year.”
There may be trouble ahead ...
[Since writing this, in July 2017, the electorate has been advised that elections will take place in 2019 ...]
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