The CENI website (http://www.cei-rdc.cd/) is not loading... Maybe it's down with too many visitors?
Some friends in Congo yesterday told us that text messaging services had been suspended within the country. People can send international text messages, but not inside of the country. I believe they can receive messages from international numbers as well.
Additionally, some cities had curfews yesterday and maybe even on Sunday night.
There are lots of soldiers in North Kivu... People are anxiously waiting for the results to be announced, supposedly that will happen today.
So for now, we are waiting.
A few more articles that I've found which you may want to read, especially this op-ed piece on the Guardian by Jason Stearns, which is quoted in part below. Click the link (or here) to read the full article.
"The verdict of Congo's voters must not be sacrificed for 'stability'"
Foreign powers who choose to look the other way as polls are rigged will hardly make the country more stable
Tens of millions of Congolese went to the polls last Monday. It was an emotional day: women with infants strapped to their back waited for hours in the sun, while elsewhere old men hobbled through knee-deep water to cast their ballots. And yet, as the country heads towards a post-election crisis, western diplomats seem ready to see the voters' verdict sacrificed for a misguided notion of stability.
These elections, the second since the end of a bloody civil war, have been mired in controversy for the past year. In January, President Joseph Kabila's party orchestrated a change in the constitution, getting rid of a runoff round of polls for the presidency. This effectively pitted opposition candidates against each other, improving Kabila's chances. The election law was also changed, allowing the ruling coalition to appoint the head of the election commission. Nonetheless, the incumbent has faced stiff competition, especially from firebrand opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi, who has been able to attract crowds of over 100,000 people. There has been no reliable polling, but preliminary results from voting stations suggest that the race is tight, meaning even minor rigging could be a game-changer.
The Democratic Republic of the Congo has suffered from violence for the past 15 years, often due to unaccountable leadership. Looking the other way as polls are rigged will hardly make the country more stable.
And other recent articles to read:
Congolese crisis - The Nation
DRC: Ceni publishes the fourth partial results of the presidential election - Radio Okapi - In French (but you can translate the page using translate.google.com). This says that Kabila is winning in both North and South Kivus by a large margin... Seems unlikely.
DR Congo's Kabila leads top rival day before final result - AFP
Clashes erupt in Congo ahead of vote results - Reuters
How wars and poverty have saved DR Congo's forests - BBC - But this is election time, not time to talk about the rain forest!
Congo election: Joseph Kabila leads in early results - The Guardian
DR Congo 'to use army in event of poll chaos' - Al Jazeera News, video on YouTubeI'll post again when we know the results, if they will even be published or announced today.
Continuing to pray,
Bethany
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