DR Congo’s top court yesterday declared Felix Tshisekedi president after disputed elections, outraging opponents who alleged a stitch-up as an African Union delegation prepared to head to the volatile country.
Announcing the final results of the much-delayed poll, the Constitutional Court threw out a legal challenge by runner-up Martin Fayulu.
It declared Tshisekedi the winner, paving the way for him to take over from long-term leader Joseph Kabila.
The chairman of the African Union, Rwandan President Paul Kagame, was due in Kinshasa on Monday after it and other international bodies voiced concern over the results.
Fayulu has described the outcome as an “electoral coup”.
He has alleged that Tshisekedi promised to protect Kabila’s political and financial interests in return for helping ensure his victory.
Fayulu called on world powers to reject the results, declaring himself “the only legitimate president”.
“I ask the entire international community not to recognise a power that has neither legitimacy nor legal standing to represent the Congolese people,” he said of Tshisekedi.
Tshisekedi’s victory was provisionally announced earlier this month by the Independent National Election Commission (CENI) but it was challenged both at home and abroad.
On Sunday, the Constitutional Court, which is made up of Kabila’s allies, said Fayulu’s claims were “unfounded”.
It said he had failed to prove any inaccuracies in the figures, describing his call for a recount as “absurd”.
“Only the CENI has produced authentic and sincere results,” judge Noel Kilomba said.
The court went on to declare Tshisekedi as the “President of the Democratic Republic of Congo by simple majority”.
The Financial Times and other foreign media have reported seeing documents that confirm Fayulu as the winner.
The influential Roman Catholic Church, which says it deployed 40,000 observers to monitor the poll, has also dismissed the official outcome.