DRC opposition leader is named as the country's new president

Provisional results put him ahead
of another opposition candidate, Martin Fayulu, and the ruling coalition's
Emmanuel Shadary. If confirmed, Mr Tshisekedi will be the first opposition
challenger to win since the DR Congo gained independence.
Current President Joseph Kabila is
stepping down after 18 years in office.
He had
promised DR Congo's first orderly transfer of power since the country's
independence from Belgium in 1960.
The election
outcome was initially expected to be announced on Sunday. The interim result
can still be challenged.
In the early hours of Thursday the
head of DR Congo's National Electoral Commission (Ceni), Corneille Nangaa, said
Mr Tshisekedi had received 38.5% of the vote and had been "provisionally
declared the elected president".
The full
results were, with turnout reportedly 48%:-
§ Felix
Tshisekedi - 7 million votes
§ Martin Fayulu - 6.4 million votes
§ Emmanuel Shadary - 4.4 million votes
Mr Tshisekedi,
who is the son of late veteran opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi, told
supporters at his Union for Democracy and Social Progress party headquarters in
Kinshasa that Mr Kabila should no longer be seen as a rival.
"I pay
tribute to President Joseph Kabila and today we should no longer see him as an
adversary, but rather, a partner in democratic change in our country," he
said.
Mr Tshisekedi
has promised to make the fight against poverty his priority.
Mr Fayulu, a
former oil tycoon, dismissed the results as having "nothing to do with the
truth". "The Congolese people will never accept such a fraud,"
he told the BBC, adding: "Felix Tshisekedi never got 7 million votes.
Where did he get them from?".
Source: BBC Africa.
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