Congolese overwhelmingly oppose
changing the constitution to allow President Joseph Kabila to stand for a third
term and believe he should step down at the end of his mandate in December,
according to an opinion poll published on Tuesday.
Democratic Republic of Congo's
ruling coalition and part of the opposition have agreed to delay the vote from
this November to April 2018, citing difficulties enrolling millions of voters
But the main opposition bloc rejects
the accord, saying it allows Kabila to cling to power and remove constitutional
term limits.
The poll, conducted by the Congo
Research Group at New York University in collaboration with a Congolese polling
institute, sampled 7,545 respondents in Congo's 26 provinces in face-to-face
interviews between May and September.
Over 81 percent of the respondents
oppose changing the constitution to allow Kabila to stand for a third term.
Seventy-four percent say he should leave office this year.
If the presidential election were
held today, 33 percent said they would vote for former provincial governor
Moise Katumbi, 18 percent for opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi and 7.8
percent for Kabila. Kabila registered a 44 percent approval rating. Katumbi and
Tshisekedi received 85.8 and 65.3 percent ratings respectively.
The results, which varied little
based on socio-economic status, gender and religion, show a marked drop in
support for Kabila, who officially won 48.9 percent of the vote in 2011, a
consequence of a lack of economic development and poor security.
Exhaustive surveys are almost
non-existent in Congo, where poor roads and little electricity make polling
difficult or unreliable. The Congo Research Group said its poll had a margin of
error of 5 percent.
Katumbi, the multi-millionaire
former governor of Congo's copper-mining region, declared his candidacy for
president in May but was then sentenced in absentia to three years in prison
for real estate fraud.
Tshisekedi, the 83-year-old
president of Congo's largest opposition party, finished runner-up to Kabila in
the 2011 election, which observers said was marred by fraud.
Congo is Africa's largest copper
producer but ranks 176 out of 188 countries on the U.N. Human Development
Index.
Over 48 percent of respondents said
they would participate in protests if elections were rigged or delayed.
Congo has not experienced a peaceful
transition of power since independence in 1960. Dozens were killed last month
in demonstrations in the capital, Kinshasa.
-Reuters
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