Accusations of fraud Second-place candidate Martin Fayulu claimed that the results were rigged later that day, stating "In
2006, Jean-Pierre Bemba's victory was stolen, in
2011,
Étienne Tshisekedi's victory was stolen. In 2018 victory won't be stolen from Martin Fayulu." Furthermore, he claimed that Tshisekedi and Kabila had entered into a power-sharing deal, which was denied by Tshiseked. in exchange for allowing Kabila to control parliament and all the provincial governments. According to
Jason Stearns, several regional and international powers, including
Kenya and the United States, gave the secret agreement their tacit blessing, with then-
United States Ambassador to the Democratic Republic of the Congo later telling him "This was the best deal we could get. It was either this or Kabila stays in power." On 11 January, Fayulu claimed he received 62% of the vote and said he would challenge the result in the country's
Constitutional Court. The Court could confirm Tshisekedi, order a recount, or cancel the results and call for new elections. But Fayulu admitted that he did not believe he would have any success, saying the court is "composed of Kabila's people." He also claimed that "Felix Tshisekedi has been nominated by Mr Kabila to perpetuate the Kabila regime. Because today the boss is Kabila." Tshisekedi's spokesman denied that there was any deal between them. Fayulu officially filed a challenge to the results on 12 January. A joint investigation by the
Financial Times and
Radio France Internationale appeared to reveal that massive fraud occurred during the election. FT claimed on 15 January that its analysis of two separate collections of voting data — one from an anonymous person close to Fayulu who said they had obtained it with the help of a whistleblower, representing about 86% of votes cast, and another from the
Episcopal Conference (CENCO), which represents all Congolese bishops and fielded 39,824 observers on election day — showed Fayulu as the clear winner of the election. According to the Congo Research Group (CRG), the CENI leak was provided to several journalists by members of the opposition close to Fayulu, who all claimed they obtained it with the help of a whistleblower. At least one journalist claimed to have managed to contact the alleged source of the leak and the whistleblower's account was deemed credible. The CENCO leak was given to journalists from different sources within the organization. The CENI leak indicated that Fayulu received 59.42% of the vote, followed by Felix Tshisekedi with 18.97% and Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary with 18.54%. CENCO's tallies were 62.80%, 15.00%, and 17.99%, respectively. The following day, 11 January, at least one protester was killed in
Goma. On 18 January, the UN human rights office has said that 34 people have been killed, 59 wounded, and 241 arbitrarily arrested since the announcement of the provisional results on 10 January.
International reactions The governments of France and Belgium also issued statements questioning the official result. French Foreign Minister
Jean-Yves Le Drian claimed that Fayulu was expected to be declared the winner. Belgian Foreign Minister
Didier Reynders also doubted the result, saying that Belgium would use its temporary UN Security Council seat to investigate the situation. British Foreign Secretary
Jeremy Hunt said he was "very concerned about discrepancies" in the results. In an official statement,
Secretary-General of the United Nations António Guterres urged all parties to "refrain from violence" and "live up to their responsibility in preserving stability." The
United Nations Security Council issued a statement drafted by the French delegation urging all sides to respect the outcome of the vote on 15 January. Representatives of Russia and China stated that they oppose foreign interference in the DRC election. A number of African Union heads of state and government met in the Ethiopian capital
Addis Ababa on 17 January, issuing a statement that the organization had "serious doubts" about the provisional results and calling on the Congolese government to delay the release of the final results. The AU also stated that it would send a delegation to the DRC with "the view to reaching a consensus on a way out of the post-electoral crisis." The delegation would include AU commission head Moussa Faki and AU chairman, the
President of Rwanda,
Paul Kagame. After the Constitutional Court ruling upholding Tshisekedi's victory on 20 January, Kenyan President
Uhuru Kenyatta and South Africa President
Cyril Ramaphosa both sent their congratulations to Tshisekedi and recognized him as the next president. AU spokeswoman Ebba Kalondo also issued a statement revealing that the AU agreed to postpone the DRC delegation talks. Kalondo claimed "I can confirm to you that the trip has been postponed. Not canceled." By 22 January, the AU and EU had agreed to support Tshisekedi's presidency as well. On 23 January, the United States agreed to support the court's certification of Tshisekdi's victory and also work with the incoming DRC President's government as well.
Constitutional Court appeal Fayulu officially filed a court case on 12 January. Proceedings began on 15 January and armed riot police were deployed outside the Palace of Justice in Kinshasa. Lawyers representing Fayulu have said that the poll was rigged and have urged the Constitutional Court to order a recount. The Court ruling rejected appeals for a recount, with the verdict declaring Tshisekedi "President of the Democratic Republic of Congo by simple majority." Government spokesman Lambert Mende stated afterwards "Felix Tshisekedi will become the fifth president of the republic." After the ruling Fayulu claimed to be the "only legitimate president" and has called for mass protests. In a statement he said "The constitutional court has just confirmed that it serves a dictatorial regime ... by validating false results, (and enabling) a constitutional coup d'etat." Fayulu also called on the international community to not recognize this result. Hundreds of Tshisekedi supporters gathered outside of the court building. ==Post-court ruling==