BFF-32 Gabon: half a century ruled by Bongo family

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BFF-32

GABON-POLITICS-GOVERNMENT,CHRONO

Gabon: half a century ruled by Bongo family

LIBREVILLE, Jan 7, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Since independence in 1960, Gabon has
had only three presidents including a father and son from the Bongo family
who between them have held power for more than five decades.

Here are highlights in the history of the small central African country.

– Leon M’Ba to Omar Bongo –

Gabon becomes independent from France in August 1960, with nationalist
Leon M’Ba elected president the following year.

He dies in 1967 and is succeeded by his deputy, Albert-Bernard Bongo,
installed with the help of France.

Bongo sets up a one-party state, ruling with an iron fist and benefiting
from oil exploitation.

He converts to Islam in 1973, changing his name to Omar Bongo.

As the sole candidate, he is elected president in 1973, 1979 and 1986.

A multi-party system is introduced after social unrest and riots in 1990
but Bongo nonetheless wins the elections in 1993, 1998 and 2005. Poll results
are disputed or followed by unrest.

– From father to son –

Bongo dies from illness in June 2009 and, after a controversial election
that August, one of his sons, Ali Bongo, is sworn in as president in a
ceremony boycotted by the opposition.

Despite an opposition challenge, the constitutional court approves the
election results but there is deadly post-poll violence and looting in the
western oil hub, Port-Gentil.

The opposition slams Bongo’s “authoritarianism” and “autocratic
leadership”.

Violent clashes in December 2014 pit opposition supporters against
security forces during a banned demonstration to demand Ali Bongo’s
departure. Officials say one person was killed, while the opposition puts the
death toll higher.

– Birth dispute –

In 2014, Ali Bongo is plunged into a controversy triggered by a French
journalist’s claim that his birth certificate is forged and he is originally
Nigerian, adopted by Omar Bongo during the Biafra war in the late 1960s.

Vigorously denied, the scandal is used by Bongo’s opponents to dispute his
eligibility for office, with the constitution requiring presidential
candidates to have been born in Gabon.

The dispute leads to several legal proceedings in France and Gabon.

Before the August 2016 presidential election, the opposition again uses it
— in vain — to call for the invalidation of Ali Bongo’s candidacy.

– Post-election turmoil –

The 2016 vote takes place in a tense climate after strikes in the private
and public sectors, notably in schools and hospitals, and the regime battling
budget problems amid plummeting oil prices.

Bongo’s main rival is opposition leader Jean Ping, a veteran diplomat who
once headed the African Union Commission and held senior UN posts.

When the electoral commission announces Bongo has won, an unprecedented
wave of post-election violence breaks out.

Hundreds are arrested, the national assembly is set ablaze and security
forces storm Ping’s headquarters. The unrest leaves three people dead,
according to authorities, although the opposition estimates around 30 are
killed.

In early September 2016, Ping proclaims himself “president-elect” but
weeks later the constitutional court validates Ali Bongo’s re-election.

In the only election since then, the ruling party Gabonese Democratic
Party (PDG) wins a large parliamentary majority in long-delayed legislative
polls in October 2018.

– Absent president –

Bongo falls ill in October while in Saudi Arabia to attend an economic
forum, remaining out of his country since then and transferred to Morocco for
treatment.

The first official details about his illness are only released on December
9 when Vice President Pierre Claver Maganga Moussavou says he has suffered a
stroke.

The lack of information sparks fevered speculation that Bongo is
incapacitated or even dead, with the demise of his father in a clinic in
Spain 10 years earlier also shrouded in secrecy.

Ali Bongo addresses his compatriots for the first time in a video message
released on December 31 and recorded in Rabat in which he says he is “better”
and was “preparing to meet you again soon.”

BSS/AFP/RY/1608 hrs