AFP23 May 2024 | 4:02

DR Congo economy minister elected head of National Assembly

The selection process had left Vital Kamerhe the sole candidate, and his election to the post during an open session of the Assembly was merely a formality.

DR Congo economy minister elected head of National Assembly

Picture: Pixabay.com

KINSHASA - The economy minister of the Democratic Republic of Congo's (DRC) outgoing government was elected head of the country's National Assembly on Wednesday, three days after an attack on his home during what officials say was an attempted coup.

The selection process had left Vital Kamerhe the sole candidate, and his election to the post during an open session of the Assembly was merely a formality. The only votes he did not capture were 36 invalid or blank ballots, out of a total of 407.

In his inaugural speech, Kamerhe referred to the recent attack on his home, decrying it as "the incursion of an unidentified, heavily armed commando group, who tried in vain to destabilise the institutions of the republic".

With the country also facing a serious security crisis in the east, where M23 rebels have occupied swathes of territory, Kamerhe promised to place security "at the heart of [his] concerns", while "working to improve the living conditions" of the Congolese people.

Kamerhe, 65, previously held the same position from 2006 to 2009 during the presidency of Joseph Kabila.

After that, he moved into the opposition, founding the Union for the Congolese Nation party (UNC), then became an ally of current President Felix Tshisekedi, who has been in power since 2019 and was re-elected in December.

In 2020, when he was Tshisekedi's chief of staff, Kamerhe was accused of embezzlement and sentenced to 20 years in prison, but he was released a year later and subsequently acquitted on appeal.

In March of 2023, he returned as minister of economy, with the rank of deputy prime minister.

In the early hours of Sunday morning, armed men attacked Kamerhe's home before moving on to the nearby Palais de la Nation, which houses Tshisekedi's offices in the capital Kinshasa.

DRC army spokesman General Sylvain Ekenge later announced that defence and security forces had stopped "an attempted coup d'etat".

About 40 attackers, including several US nationals, were arrested and four others killed, according to Ekenge.

In a phone call with Tshisekedi on Wednesday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken condemned the attack and "offered U.S. support for the government's investigation", his spokesman Matthew Miller said in a statement.

Many questions remain unanswered about the incident, but analysts have suggested it could create suspicion between members of the ruling parliamentary coalition, with some believing it was less a coup bid and more an attempt to assassinate Kamerhe.

Members of the pro-Tshisekedi coalition had been split for months on who should lead the Assembly before finally settling on Kamerhe.

His election should smooth the way to formally establishing a new government.

More than five months after elections, the new team is still not in place to deal with the issues facing the country, including high poverty and the rebellion in the east.

Tshisekedi and Blinken also discussed on Wednesday "the eastern DRC crisis and the need for additional measures to restore peace and stability" as well as "the dire humanitarian situation" there.