Dead bodies still lay on the streets of Gombe on Wednesday morning.
This was the neighbourhood of the Congolese capital, Kinshasa, where men loyal to President Joseph Kabila and those of his rival and Vice-President Jean-Pierre Bemba did battle from Sunday, when first-round election results were announced, until a peace agreement on Tuesday.
The United Nations mission was trying on Wednesday morning to enforce the peace accord, which requires the two factions to withdraw their troops to where they were before the clashes began.
But until midday, armed men loyal to Mr Bemba were at large in parts of Gombe, while police and soldiers loyal to Mr Kabila controlled other sectors.
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So it is a fragile calm that has taken hold of the capital.
Public transport is running again, but Gombe still looks nothing like a normal weekday, when hundreds of thousands of people converge on the district.
Many people waited in front of banks, which have not yet opened their doors.
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Looting can be seen in several areas.
Young people attacked and looted the headquarters of PAREC, an organisation involved in disarmament which is headed by one of President Kabila's advisers.
The youths accused the president of starting the fighting.
Elsewhere in Gombe, the police fired a few rounds into the air to disperse other groups of youths who were looting a church where the priest is thought to be close to the president.
President Kabila is very unpopular in the capital, where he barely received 13% of the votes, while Mr Bemba received over 60%.
Residents of the capital, who live below the poverty line in this country so rich in natural resources, have had enough.
"We don't know why they are fighting, because they both qualified for the second round, " one 40-year-old told me.
"All we want is for them to go to the second round and for the president not to be chosen through weapons, " he said.
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