A New Crisis in Congo?
Is corruption behind the latest political crisis in DR Congo, as the government postpones elections? Is more violence "all but inevitable" in the country, as the UN claims?
We look at how money could be inspiring a new descent into violence in Africa. The government in the Democratic Republic of Congo has postponed this year's elections by 18 months, saying the voters' register is not ready. The opposition and western donors suspect this is a power-grab by the president, and say it could draw the country into a new conflict. The DRC has already suffered years of war, largely fueled by its lucrative mineral resources.
We hear from a government spokesman, an opposition presidential candidate, Emmanuel Weyi, and from Sasha Lezhnev, associate director of Policy at the Enough Project, a US-based atrocity-prevention policy group focused on Central and East Africa. It is publishing the report A Criminal State on the situation in DRC later this week, and believes that corruption within the international trade in minerals is a large factor behind the crisis.
Also, Lucy Kellaway of the Financial Times reflects on the corporate addiction to the concept of creativity, something she says is massively overrated in business.
(Photo: Opposition supporter at a rally in Kinshasa. Credit: Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Getty Images)
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Broadcasts
- Mon 24 Oct 2016 07:32GMT91热爆 World Service except News Internet
- Mon 24 Oct 2016 15:06GMT91热爆 World Service except East and Southern Africa, News Internet & West and Central Africa
Podcast
-
Business Daily
The daily drama of money and work from the 91热爆.