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  • DR Congo's prime minister indicated Thursday that he would step down, a day after parliament approved a motion of censure against him in a political victory for President Felix Tshisekedi. "I await notification of this decision to take up my responsibilities in line with the constitution," Prime Minister Sylvestre Ilunga Ilunkamba, an ally of Tshisekedi's predecessor Joseph Kabila, said in a statement. Lawmakers on Wednesday evening overwhelmingly backed a motion to censure Ilunga and his government, with whom Tshisekedi has been embroiled in a months-long power struggle. Under the constitution, the prime minister is required to tender his resignation to the head of state within 24 hours of censure. The vote marked a step forward in Tshisekedi's bid to wrest the levers of power from supporters of Kabila, who ruled the Democratic Republic of Congo from 2001 until stepping down in 2018. Tshisekedi took office in January 2019 after elections that were criticised for irregularities but enabled the DRC's first peaceful transition since independence in 1960. But he was also obliged to go into a power-sharing deal with Kabila supporters, who at that time wielded a majority in the National Assembly. Tensions swiftly emerged over the formation of a coalition government and reached breaking point last year when Tshisekedi complained that his programme of reforms was being stymied. On December 6, he announced the end to the coalition and intended to seek a new government based on a "sacred union of the nation" within the National Assembly. In a letter posted on his office's website, Ilunga on Wednesday hit out at the National Assembly's provisional bureau, which oversees parliamentary procedure. He lashed the "notorious motion of censure" as "no more than a political manoeuvre with no basis in fact, flouting the requirements of the state of law." Kabila took the helm of the DRC in 2001, succeeding his father, Laurent-Desire Kabila, after he was assassinated by a bodyguard. Still only 49 years old despite his 18 years in office, the ex-president retains extensive clout through allies in politics, the military and business. st-bmb/ri/dl
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  • DR Congo PM signals intention to quit after censure
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