The Congolese Prime Minister claims that the presidential orders dealing with army reorganizations, including the elimination of General John Numbi, should have been co-signed by him. A new rise of tension within the ruling coalition.
Sylvestre Ilunga asked for a meeting with Félix Tshisekedi on Tuesday to ′′ clarify ′′ what he describes as a ′′ situation of concern ". The Congolese Prime Minister says in a statement to have read ′′ to his surprise ′′ the presidential orders on the Army appointments released on Friday.
The head of government, who was on the move to Lubumbashi on that day, explains that these orders were countersigned by the Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of the Interior, Gilbert Kankonde Malamba, who was acting on his interim basis, while this ′′ falls under the control of the exclusive competence attached to the Prime Minister's quality ".
Iron arm FCC-Cach
Sylvestre Ilunga also insists that his counterseing is ′′ a guarantee of the balance of powers between the President of the Republic and the Prime Minister, who is the emanation of the National Assembly ".
Watermark of this unpublished public distance from the Prime Minister to a presidential decision, the arm's length between the Common Front for Congo (FCC, by Joseph Kabila) and the Coalition for Change (Cach, from Félix Tshisekedi): Sylvestre Ilunga, from the FCC, calls into question the legitimacy of the signing of Gilbert Kankonde Malamba, who is, he, from the UDPS (the party of Tshisekedi, member of the Cach).
The management of the FCC has shoved the nail, in a press release published in the wake of the Congolese Prime Minister, in which it believes that the Interior Minister should have settled for the ′′ handling of current affairs and not for signing ′′ Acts of high legal scope ". ′′ The FCC deduces that the drafts of these orders were prepared several months earlier, and that no emergency justified the contravention of an unauthorized temporary worker ".
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