Neighbouring African countries have rowed back on a call for a recount in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s disputed presidential election.
Opposition leader and election runner-up Martin Fayulu is demanding that Congo's highest court order a recount of the December 30th vote, which was meant to lead to Congo's first democratic transfer of power in 59 years of independence.
Mr Fayulu claims he won by a landslide and that the victory of another opposition figure, Felix Tshisekedi, was engineered by authorities. The dispute risks stoking new instability in the volatile central African country where previous elections have been followed by violence.
Election officials deny the results were rigged. The original statement on Sunday by the Southern African Development Community SADC, which includes Kinshasa allies such as South Africa and Angola, and another regional body the following day had piled pressure on Congo to address the allegations.
But apparently wary that a recount could heighten tensions, South Africa and Zambia backtracked within 24 hours of Sunday's statement and said they would not push for one.
On Thursday, the entire 16-member bloc echoed that position following an emergency meeting in Addis Ababa attended by heads of state including South Africa's Cyril Ramaphosa and Angola's Joao Lourenco.
“We call upon the international community to respect ... the ongoing internal legal and political processes for the finalisation of the electoral process,” the SADC said in a statement. It made no mention of an earlier appeal for a power-sharing government.
The African Union was also holding a meeting on Thursday in Addis Ababa, which AU chairman and Rwandan president Paul Kagame said was aimed at preventing "the people outside of our continent to meddle ... trying to find solutions for us".
Mr Fayulu, a former Exxon Mobil manager, says Mr Tshisekedi, who is the president of Congo's largest opposition party, struck a deal with outgoing president Joseph Kabila to be declared winner. Mr Tshisekedi and Mr Kabila's camps deny that.
The Constitutional Court is due to rule by Friday on Mr Fayulu’s complaint, but Mr Fayulu has said he is not confident he will win before the nine-judge court, which he considers friendly to Mr Kabila.
The United States on Wednesday kept up the pressure on Kinshasa, vowing to "hold accountable" anyone who undermines democratic processes.
Domestic election monitors noted a range of voting irregularities, and the Catholic Church said official results were inconsistent with its own tallies. Three diplomats briefed on the Church's findings said they showed that Mr Fayulu had won a clear victory. – Reuters