UN Congo cuts internet before elections to avert "chaos"

  • 🔧 Issue with uploading attachments resolved.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
https://www.voanews.com/a/congo-cut...64.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

KINSHASA —

Democratic Republic of Congo’s government cut internet connections and SMS services across the country for a second straight day on Tuesday as the country nervously awaited results from the weekend’s chaotic presidential election.

Both the opposition and ruling coalition said on Monday they were on track to win after a turbulent election day on Sunday in which many Congolese were unable to vote due to an Ebola outbreak, conflict and logistical problems.

Barnabe Kikaya bin Karubi, a senior adviser to President Joseph Kabila, said internet and SMS services were cut to preserve public order after “fictitious results” began circulating on social media.

“That could lead us straight toward chaos,” Kikaya told Reuters, adding the connections would remain cut until the publication of complete results on Jan. 6.

The signal to Radio France Internationale (RFI), one of the most popular news sources in Congo, was also down, and the government withdrew the accreditation of RFI’s main correspondent in the country late on Monday for having aired unofficial results from the opposition.

The various moves reflected high tensions in Congo, where the long-delayed election was meant to choose a successor to Kabila, who is due to step down next month after 18 years in power - and two years after the official end of his mandate.

Congo has never seen a democratic transfer of power, and any disputed outcome could lead to a repeat of the violence that followed the 2006 and 2011 elections and a wider security breakdown in its volatile eastern provinces.

The opposition says the election was marred by fraud and accused Kabila of planning to rule from the sidelines through his preferred candidate, former interior minister Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary.

Internal U.N. reports, seen by Reuters, noted allegations of irregularities across the country. In some parts of eastern Congo’s North Kivu province, for example, militia fighters reportedly forced voters to select candidates from the ruling coalition, they said.

In other places, the United Nations received reports that security forces intimidated voters to choose ruling coalition candidates.

The government and national electoral commission (CENI) said the election was fair and that any problems were minor.

FEARS OF VIOLENCE

In the eastern city of Goma, residents were on edge as they awaited the results.

“If the results during the publication of the presidential results don’t reflect the truth ... trouble will break out across the city,” said Fabrice Shweka, a Goma resident.

The first partial results were initially expected on Tuesday but CENI spokesman Jean-Pierre Kalamba said that they would not be ready until around Friday.

“We don’t want to release too many voting trends (before Jan. 6) because in our country we don’t have a population that has the same understanding (of electoral practice as in Europe),” he told Reuters.

In a statement late on Monday, the embassies in Congo of the European United, United States and several other countries called for calm and urged the government to restore internet access.

Shadary faced off in Sunday’s poll against two main opposition challengers, Felix Tshisekedi and Martin Fayulu, both of whom opinion polls before the vote showed running ahead of Shadary.

Fayulu complained in a statement on Monday about irregularities during Sunday’s vote but said he was encouraged by the determination of Congolese to vote despite long queues and voting machines that broke down.

“I call for vigilance across the board and the general mobilization of all Congolese so that the truth of the ballot box, the sole witness to the will of the Congolese people, can reward their efforts and sacrifices,” he said.
 
I'd be interested to see how the manage to circumvent the shutdown. I'm confident they'll find some ghetto, but moderately effective way.
 
Internet or no internet, there's still going to be some form of chaos. I mean it's fucking Congo, when isn't there any?
 
Both the opposition and ruling coalition said on Monday they were on track to win after a turbulent election day on Sunday in which many Congolese were unable to vote due to an Ebola outbreak, conflict and logistical problems.
Christ almighty what?! Cutting the internet and communications during an Ebola outbreak is probably one of the dumbest things you could do.
 
Christ almighty what?! Cutting the internet and communications during an Ebola outbreak is probably one of the dumbest things you could do.
This isn't a country exactly well know for making smart decisions. But hey, it could be worse, they could be instituting traditional healers in villages to help spread exorcise the ebola demons.
 
“If the results during the publication of the presidential results don’t reflect the truth ... trouble will break out across the city,” said Fabrice Shweka, a Goma resident.
Well here's the problem. Trouble is inevitable because everyone sort of expects their guy to win. If he didn't, then obviously there was some trickery afoot and so they feel justified in complaining. Likewise, any government loyalists will feel justified in cracking down on said protestors because their guy clearly won.

Shutting down the internet may actually work as a way to prevent widespread protests in the short term, given how the majority of the population are backwater villagers, but it's little more than a bandage over a much bigger issue. We see this exact same problem cropping everywhere in the developing world: uneducated populations given access to to 21st century technology and a figurative fire hose of information, with no idea how to use it or how to tell lies from truth. India is the case study for this exact thing, but Africa will undoubtedly be the same thing on a much wider scale.
 
This is actually pretty smart, since the average election in Africa leaves at least a few dozen people dead minimum, as well as hundreds of injured and insane amounts of local property destruction. And that's a peaceful election. At worst, you get a civil war.
 
Ending colonialism was a mistake.
Leaving them to fend for themselves was a mistake, maybe. Some of these people still live in huts, for chrissakes. You can't just pull out and expect them to make a functioning democracy. That's what had the British fighting the colonial emergencies in the 50s.
 
Democracy doesn't work in countries that aren't economically developed and don't have a high level of education. Fuck, it barely works in places that do have those things. This is why I don't hate the Chinese government (for example), they're an autocracy that sometimes does shitty things, but if they were a democracy they would be like India is today. This is also why Iraq and Libya turned to absolute shit after Saddam and Qaddafi were deposed. Some cultures are just not ready for democracy yet, and there's nothing wrong with that.
 
Christ almighty what?! Cutting the internet and communications during an Ebola outbreak is probably one of the dumbest things you could do.
Think of it this way.

There will be less low IQ people around on the Earth.
 
Or atleast ending it so quickly and without doing your best to install a government with any idea what it's doing.

Not true. Most post-colonial governments in Africa knew what they were doing, since their job was to make themselves and their associates rich and keep in the good graces of their chosen allies (NATO/USSR).
 
Congo is one of the worst shitholes on earth. It's like Australatina but with black people.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Well here's the problem. Trouble is inevitable because everyone sort of expects their guy to win. If he didn't, then obviously there was some trickery afoot and so they feel justified in complaining. Likewise, any government loyalists will feel justified in cracking down on said protestors because their guy clearly won.
Of course, this isn't limited to primitive areas like the DRC, since your words just as accurately describe the United States. Makes me wonder how to get these areas into a better spot longterm, I have to think getting rid of a lot of their ridiculous religious beliefs is a start.
 
How's democracy suppose to work in a country where the majority of people are illiterate and uneducated
Doesn't it just turn into a contest to see who is the biggest snake?
 
Back
Top Bottom