"To dissolve the coalition would mean to create a political crisis…The political crises, it is known how they start, but one does not know how they finish. That could make the play of a third small drainage canal…That will not benefit to the population…When two elephants fight, it is the grass which suffers from it ", answered president Felix-Félix-Antoine Tshisekedi a question of a journalist who wondered why not to dissolve the coalition to the power if the things do not go well.

Obviously, the climate is very often tended between the common Front for Congo of Joseph Kabila and the Cap for change (CACH) of the current president. Several political files, in particular the proposals for a reform of the legal space of two FCC deputies - Minaku and Sakata -, the ratification of Ronsard Malonda by the National Assembly like new president of the independent national electoral Commission (CENI) or the orders of last July concerning the installation at the constitutional Court, strongly divided the two camps to the power.

As often, Felix Tshisekedi who met his predecessor two weeks ago, plays for appeasing.

"Our negotiators are in talks currently. The true problem, it is because we come from two horizons diametrically opposite. Nevertheless, we have a common program…We have only different approaches ", he relatives in front of four congolese journalists: Baudouin Amba Wetshi, Sheik FITA, Francis Kakonde and Me Dona.

Corneille Kinsala N’soki


(CKS/Yes)