Thu May 17 2012 18:25:12 +0200 CEST
15 Feb 2012

State Department on Ongoing Electoral Process in DRC

The United States continues to closely monitor the electoral process in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and urges Congolese authorities to conduct a full, thorough, and transparent investigation into the hundreds of legal disputes against some legislative election results.

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesperson
February 14, 2012

STATEMENT BY VICTORIA NULAND, SPOKESPERSON

Ongoing Electoral Process in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)

The United States continues to closely monitor the electoral process in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the hundreds of legal disputes against some legislative election results. We urge Congolese authorities to conduct a full, thorough, and transparent investigation into these disputes, and to release vote tabulation and other records related to the elections and their outcome.

We remain deeply concerned about multiple allegations of human rights abuses by security forces, including illegal and arbitrary detentions throughout the electoral process. The Congolese government should fully investigate such reports, hold anyone found responsible fully accountable, and take concrete steps to ensure that security forces exercise restraint and respect people’s rights of assembly and of peaceful protest. We call on all Congolese leaders and their supporters to act responsibly and to publicly renounce violence.

Despite these concerns, we encourage all political parties to participate fully when the National Assembly is seated in order to preserve and protect the basic democratic principle of representative government in the Congo. The United States remains steadfast in its support of the Congolese people as they work to build a brighter, more democratic future for the DRC.

Washington Updated: 
2012-02-15 15:5:40 GMT

This headline is part of following dossiers:

President Obama addresses the Ghanaian Parliament in Accra July 11 (AP Images)
Obama Calls on Africans to Claim Their Future [...] So I do not see the countries and peoples of Africa as a world apart; I see Africa as a fundamental part of our interconnected world -- as partners...
State Dept Image / Dec 06, 2011 Secretary Clinton delivers remarks in recognitio
The three ways that the Obama Administration is promoting human rights around the world: • First, we are elevating human rights through increased engagement with Muslim communities worldwide; •...

Distributed by the Embassy of the United States of America, Brussels, Belgium. Web sites: http://belgium.usembassy.gov; http://www.uspolicy.be.

Dossiers in the picture

NATO: Chicago and Beyond

Share

Share this

Now on Twitter @usembbrussels

Join our online communities

Stay tuned with US Policy.be: