Congolese
President Denis Sassou Nguessou arrives to cast his ballot on October 25, 2015
in Brazzaville ©- (AFP)
|
Low voter turnout at a
weekend referendum to enable Congolese President Denis Sassou Nguesso to extend
his 31-year stay in office was "a slap in the face" for the longtime
leader, the opposition said Monday. "He's just had a slap in the face, the
Congolese refused to vote," Pascal Tsaty Mabiala of the country's biggest
parliamentary opposition party, the UPADS, told AFP.
Mabiala
estimated turnout Sunday at only around 10 percent, saying this showed that
voters had followed the opposition's calls to boycott a referendum they
described as "a constitutional coup d'etat".
There
was no official word on turnout, but initial observations suggested the numbers
were low at some polling stations in the capital and other major cities in the
small West African country.
"There
were no crowds or enthusiasm," said a source in city hall at Ouesso in the
north.
"A
good number of voters didn't show up," a military source told AFP in the
city of Owando.
Polling
stations visited by AFP correspondents in Brazzaville throughout the day showed
no waiting line of voters, except near the presidential palace where Sassou
Nguesso, one of Africa's longest-serving leaders, cast his own ballot.
The
ballots for a referendum on whether longtime President Denis Sassou Nguesso can
seek a third term in office in the Republic of Congo on October 25, 2015 ©-
(AFP)
|
The
Congolese government spokesman, Thierry Moungalla, said that the referendum
results would be announced "on Wednesday night at the latest."
"Let's
not say that all those who didn't vote agree with the opposition,"
Moungalla cautioned.
Congo
was rocked by protests in the run-up to the vote, including clashes Tuesday
between opposition demonstrators and security forces in Brazzaville and the
economic hub Pointe-Noire that authorities say left four people dead.
But
opposition leader Paul-Marie Mpouele claimed Friday that at least 20 people had
died in the unrest.
The
referendum proposed two changes to the constitution, which currently
disqualifies Sassou Nguesso from running for re-election in 2016 because it
stipulates a maximum age of 70 for presidential candidates and limits the
number of mandates to two.
Sassou
Nguesso is over the age limit and has already served two consecutive seven-year
terms.
On
Monday, the Internet, text messaging services and French radio RFI's popular FM
signal, were all cut for the sixth day running.
"After
everything we've gone through, harassment, arrests, abuse, unbelievable
violence... we will continue our civil disobedience," Tsaty said.
The
results of the referendum are expected sometime this week.
Opposition demonstrators
have rallied on the streets of the capital to protest the president's plan to
cling to power under the cry "Sassoufit", a pun on the French
expression "ca suffit", or "that's enough".
No comments:
Post a Comment