A group of Congolese opposition candidates have written to the governor of Kinshasa to say they will hold a protest next week over the country's disputed presidential election.
Delays during Wednesday's election day in the Democratic Republic of Congo led to an extension of the voting, which some opposition candidates and independent observers said compromises the credibility of the vote.
Election disputes often fuel unrest in Congo and risk further destabilising a country with globally important reserves of cobalt and copper, which is already battling widespread poverty and an eastern security crisis.
Five opposition candidates plan a joint protest in the capital on December 27, according to a December 22 letter to the Kinshasa governor shared on X social media platform by Jean-Marc Kabunda, a representative of candidate Martin Fayulu.
"We will protest against the irregularities observed during the voting operations ... and before. We will also protest against the (voting) extension," the letter said.
"The aforementioned irregularities sufficiently demonstrate that on December 20, 2023, the elections were a sham," it added.
The CENI election commission has acknowledged there were delays on December 20 that meant some polling stations failed to open, but it has rejected allegations the credibility of the election was compromised by extending some voting.
Full provisional results of the election are expected by December 31, with daily updates released from Saturday.


Turkey to host Gaza meeting amid ceasefire concerns
Tanzania opposition says hundreds killed in vote protests
Turkey sentences 11 people to life in prison over ski resort hotel fire
China sends its youngest astronaut to 'Heavenly Palace' space station
Israel launches more strikes on Gaza overnight, testing fragile truce
Trump-Putin summit cancelled, FT reports
Houthis say 43 detained UN staff to face trial over Israeli attack
Hurricane Melissa leaves 49 dead in Caribbean, churns north
