Congo court reduces activists’ sentences for anti-Kabila signs

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An appeals court on Friday reduced the prison sentences for six Congolese activists jailed for preparing banners demanding that President Joseph Kabila step down when his term ends this year, their lawyer said.

The sentences for the activists from Struggle for Change (Lucha), convicted of incitement to revolt after police found them making the signs in a private home, were cut from two years to six months, Georges Kapiamba said.

Kapiamba said the appeals court’s decision was political and the judges did not provide a clear rationale for the reduction. He added that his clients would appeal again.

“They reduced the sentence to six months but we reject that,” Kapiamba said. “This is shameful. The dossier is empty.”

The United Nations’ human rights office in Congo confirmed the verdict.

Rights groups, the United Nations and several Western countries condemned last week’s verdict as politically motivated. The government denied the accusation and accused critics of meddling in its judiciary.

Kabila succeeded his assassinated father in 2001 and won disputed elections in 2006 and 2011.

The constitution bars him from standing for a third term.

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