Senators want Obama to impose sanctions
on Congo
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[May 28, 2016]
By Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. senators
called on President Barack Obama's administration on Friday to impose
targeted sanctions on officials in the Democratic Republic of Congo
responsible for violence and rights violations amid rising political
tensions.
Hoping to increase pressure on the government of President Joseph
Kabila, three of Obama's fellow Democrats, senators Richard Durbin,
Edward Markey and Christopher Murphy, said on Friday they had
introduced a Senate resolution this week calling on Kabila's
government to fulfill its constitutional mandate for a democratic
transition of power late this year.
They called for targeted sanctions, including visa bans and asset
freezes, until Kabila publicly commits to a peaceful transition of
power.
Their action reflected growing international worry over the
situation in the African nation. United Nations Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday voiced concern about reports of rising
political tension due to uncertainty about the presidential
election.
Dozens of Kabila critics have been arrested since last year as part
of what the United Nations and rights groups say is an escalating
crackdown on political dissent ahead of a presidential election
scheduled for November.
Kabila is ineligible to stand for re-election after serving two
elected terms, but opponents accuse him of trying to delay the poll
to hold onto power. Congo's highest court ruled last week that the
president could stay in power if elections did not occur by the end
of his mandate.
On Thursday, a protester and a police officer were killed in Goma,
in the eastern part of the country, during protests against a
possible elections delay. The United Nations said dozens of people
were arrested.
Opposition leaders accuse Kabila of stalling the vote in order to
extend his 15-year rule, which the president denies.
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Riot police hold their position as they attempt to disperse
supporters of Democratic Republic of Congo's opposition Presidential
candidate Moise Katumbi as they escort him to the prosecutor's
office over government allegations he hired mercenaries in a plot
against the state in Lubumbashi, the capital of Katanga province,
May 13, 2016. REUTERS/Kenny Katombe
Democratic congressional aides said they expected to add more
co-sponsors for the resolution after Congress returns from its
Memorial Day recess on June 6.
There is bipartisan support for U.S. action to address the
situation.
Republican Senator Jeff Flake, the chairman of the Foreign Relations
Committee's Africa subcommittee, told Reuters in a brief interview
this week that he felt sanctions would be appropriate and had
discussed them with U.S. State Department officials.
"Hopefully we're together on this," Flake said. "I think we will be.
We just want to make sure that whatever we do, pushes in the right
direction."
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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