Categories: World

Gabon gears up for contentious elections as president seeks third term amidst political dynasty debate

close Video

Fox News Flash top headlines for August 24

Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com.

  • Gabon’s upcoming elections this weekend are poised to determine the nation’s political course and potentially extend a political dynasty that has spanned 55 years.
  • With over 800,000 eligible voters, the African country is set to elect local officials, national assembly representatives, and the next president.
  • The capital city, Libreville, is on edge due to historical instances of violence surrounding elections.

Gabon’s president is seeking a third term in elections this weekend that could extend his family’s 55-year political dynasty. The capital of Libreville, meanwhile, is bracing for a repeat of the violence that has marred balloting in the past.

The central African nation’s 800,000-plus eligible voters are to elect local lawmakers, national assembly members and the next president.

Incumbent Ali Bongo Ondimba, 64, who won his current term in office by a narrow margin, is being challenged by economics professor and former education minister Albert Ondo Ossa.

Ossa’s surprise nomination came just a week before the vote and followed a closed-door meeting of heavyweights in the opposition coalition.

Bongo has served two seven-year terms and seeks to extend his family’s 55-year political dynasty with a third. Bongo, then the minister of defense, came to power in 2009 after the death of his father, Omar Bongo, who ruled the country for 41 years.

EXPERTS WARN OF POSSIBLE DISINFORMATION SURROUNDING RUSSIAN WARLORD’S REPORTED DEATH

Ossa says his goal is to break Gabon out of the status quo. He says that if elected, he would his first dissolve the national assembly, redraw the electoral map and organize new legislative elections, to form a government committed to addressing economic inequality.

Every vote held in Gabon since the country’s return to a multi-party system in 1990 has ended in violence. Clashes between government forces and protesters following the 2016 elections killed four people, according to official figures.

Opposition politician Jean Ping blamed election manipulation for his loss at the time — by less than 2% of the vote — and said the real death toll was much higher.

Analysts and observers are also concerned about possible violence.

By leaving rising unemployment unaddressed, “the current regime is sowing the seeds of post-electoral violence,” said Noël Bertrand Boudzanga, a literature professor and member of a civil society organization aimed at electoral transparency in Gabon.

Gabon’s president is seeking a third term in the upcoming elections, which is prolonging his family’s 55-year political legacy. (Fox News)

President Bongo’s objective is “to keep power at all costs,” Boudzanga said.

Nearly 40% of Gabon’s youth, aged 15-24, were out of work in 2020, according to the World Bank, a marked increase since Bongo took office.

In Libreville, some residents are stockpiling supplies and securing their property. Others are leaving town.

André Tsamba plans to take his children nearly 200 miles south of Libreville to the town of Mouila during the elections.

“We’ll be back at the start of the school year if all goes well,” Tsamba said.

JUNTA’S 3-YEAR PLAN TO TRANSITION NIGER BACK TO DEMOCRATIC RULE A ‘PROVOCATION,’ WEST AFRICAN BLOC SAYS

Last week, marking Gabon’s Independence Day, Bongo pledged to make the voting as secure as possible.

“All our nation’s defense and security forces will be called upon to protect your voices, protect your choices, (and) protect your homes and hearths,” he said.

For some, Bongo is the safe option.

Ninella Mavoungou, an employee of a communications agency in Libreville, said he will vote in his home city of Port-Gentil. “I’ll absolutely be voting for my candidate, Ali (Bongo), for the stability of the country,” Mavoungou said.

The unexpected choice of Ossa, a relatively minor political actor until now, follows recent changes by the government which barred split-ticket voting. As an independent candidate, with no legislators attached to his ballot, voters can choose Ossa without being forced to elect national assembly deputies of the same party.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“We put the national interest ahead of personal and selfish interests,” said longtime opposition figure Alexandre Barro Chambrier, who supported Ossa’s nomination over his own, on Sunday.

Ossa and his supporters say the Bongo family dynasty must end.

“The opposition’s single candidate gives us hope for a changeover, so I’ll be voting,” said 48-year-old Martine Ntsame, a Libreville resident.

Share

Recent Posts

US military conducts successful airstrikes on Houthi rebel forces in Yemen

close Video US military confirms strikes on Houthi missile storage site, command center in Yemen…

1 hour ago

Pope to skip outdoor Sunday prayer after catching cold days ahead of Christmas Eve, Day Masses

close Video Hundreds of thousands attend Pope Francis mass in Timor Over 600,000 Catholic faithful…

1 hour ago

NYPD’s top cop resigns amid subordinate’s bombshell sex harassment allegations

close Video Eric Adams charged with accepting foreign bribes Fox News' CB Cotton reports the…

2 hours ago

Report highlights prevalence of DEI at Ivy League institutions: ‘Dominant ideology’

close Video 'Shocking' report reveals Biden administration spent more than $1 billion on DEI grants…

2 hours ago

Suspect shot, killed after driving truck into Texas mall in incident that left at least 5 injured: police

close Video Authorities provide update after car careens into Texas mall Texas Department of Public…

2 hours ago

Trump announces newest nominations to lead DOJ, regulate US railroads

President-elect Trump dropped his latest round of nominations Saturday afternoon, including two picks to help…

4 hours ago