12 dead in DRC electoral law protest

An anti government protestor, center, stands in front a burning car as he and others, block roads and burn tires during a protest against a new law that could delay election to be held in 2016, in the city of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo. AP Photo/John Bompengo

An anti government protestor, center, stands in front a burning car as he and others, block roads and burn tires during a protest against a new law that could delay election to be held in 2016, in the city of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo. AP Photo/John Bompengo

Published Jan 22, 2015

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Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo - Anti-government protests in Congo have left at least a dozen people dead, officials said Thursday, as the Senate postponed a vote on a proposed law that the opposition fears will prolong the president's time in power.

After three days of unrest, Congo's capital returned cautiously to normal on Thursday, but protests continued elsewhere. In the east, four people died, an official said.

The Internet, which was cut amid the protests, was partially restored Thursday, but text messages were still blocked.

The Senate had been expected to vote Thursday on a proposed law that would require a census before presidential elections next year. But the chamber postponed the vote until Friday. Critics say the logistical challenges of conducting a census in the vast country would delay elections.

The lower house passed the measure Saturday, setting off protests that have roiled Kinshasa and spread to other parts of the country.

Since Monday, 12 people died, government spokesman Lambert Mende said on Thursday. He said more than 400 people have been arrested.

But the International Federation for Human Rights, a coalition of rights groups, said Wednesday that 42 people were killed when security forces fired on protesters. The coalition said many more were wounded.

Mende denied that police fired on protesters and emphasized that all the deaths in the government's toll happened as a result of looting.

Neither Mende nor the coalition had death tolls for Thursday, when an uneasy calm returned to the capital. But Omar Kavota, a civil society representative in Goma, in the country's east, said four people died there.

The proposed law has raised suspicions among the opposition that President Joseph Kabila, in office since 2001, is hoping to cling to power after his current term ends. Kabila is barred from running again.

Sapa-AP

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