DRC opposition delays protests after mediation with Tshisekedi
Opposition in the DRC delays protests after mediation, but tensions persist as President Tshisekedi advances a referendum to remove presidential term limits, a move critics call a power grab that risk
The Democratic Republic of Congoโs opposition coalition C64 has delayed nationwide protests against President Felix Tshisekediโs constitutional refere
Read Full Story at DW World โWhy This Matters
The DRCโs constitutional referendum crisis isnโt just about term limitsโitโs a litmus test for whether Africaโs youngest democracy can resist the continentโs authoritarian drift. If President Tshisekedi succeeds in removing presidential term limits, it would normalize executive overreach in a region where leaders from Uganda to Cameroon have exploited legal loopholes to cling to power, undermining democratic institutions at a time when economic instability and conflict already strain public trust.
Background Context
Since colonial-era constitutions were inherited at independence in 1960, the DRC has oscillated between fragile democratic experiments and entrenched autocracy, often under the guise of "stability." The current push to amend term limits follows a pattern seen in neighboring Rwanda, where Paul Kagameโs government removed similar restrictions in 2015โsparking protests that were swiftly crushed. Meanwhile, the DRCโs 2023 elections, marred by irregularities and opposition boycotts, have left a fractured political landscape where dissent is increasingly criminalized under the pretext of national security.
What Happens Next
With opposition protests delayed but not abandoned, the coming weeks will test whether civil society can sustain pressure without fracturing along ethnic or regional linesโa recurring challenge in the DRCโs fractured opposition. If the referendum proceeds, Tshisekediโs government may face a legitimacy crisis, potentially emboldening regional blocs like the Southern African Development Community (SADC) to intervene. Yet without a unified international response, the DRC risks joining the ranks of "electoral autocracies," where elections become mere formalities for entrenched leaders.
Bigger Picture
This crisis reflects a broader trend in Sub-Saharan Africa, where constitutional amendments to extend term limits are increasingly justified by leaders as necessary for "development" or "security." From Togoโs Faustian bargain to remain in power to Senegalโs recent violence over electoral reforms, the regionโs democratic backsliding is accelerating. For the DRCโa mineral-rich but governance-poor stateโthe stakes are existential: if term limits fall, the countryโs fragile social contract could collapse under the weight of unchecked power and rising inequality.
