The people of Gabon began casting their
ballots Saturday in a vote to decide whether President Ali Bongo will
remain in office or be unseated by a career diplomat and close associate
of his late father, who ran the country for 41 years.
Ali Bongo
The election takes place in a climate of persistent social unrest
driven in large part by the economic impact of the slump in the price of
oil, which has long dominated Gabon’s economy. Bongo, 57, and
ex-African Union Commission chief Jean Ping, 73, who both worked under
Omar Bongo until he died in 2009, are seen as the only credible
candidates among a field of 10. In the working class district of Rio in
the capital Libreville, a polling station set up at a school opened
shortly before 8:00 am (0700 GMT) — about an hour after the scheduled
time, an AFP journalist said. Elsewhere in the capital, voting had not
yet started at several polling stations.
Until recently, Bongo
was far and away the favourite, largely because several prominent
politicians had declared themselves as candidates, thereby dividing the
opposition. But protracted negotiations led all the key challengers to
pull out and put their weight behind Ping, with the last of them
withdrawing only last week. Some 628,000 of Gabon’s 1.8 million
inhabitants are eligible to take part in the election, whose winner will
be decided by a simple majority after a single round of voting.
The
campaign period has been acrimonious, marked by months of bitter
exchanges between the two main camps, including accusations, and
strenuous denials, that Bongo was born in Nigeria and therefore
ineligible to run.
On Friday, each side accused the other of
trying to gain an illicit advantage by buying up voter cards in various
parts of the country for sums ranging from 10,000 to 50,000 CFA francs
($20 to $100). Faced with repeated charges of nepotism, Bongo has long
insisted he owes his presidency to merit and his years of government
service. His extravagant campaign was based around the slogan “Let’s
change together”, playing up the roads and hospitals built during his
first term. In an overt jibe at Ping’s long association with his father,
Bongo has also stressed the need to break with the bad old days of
disappearing public funds and dodgy management of oil revenues.
“There’s
a risk that certain people who did so much harm to our country will
come back” to power, the president told a crowd of thousands during his
last rally in the capital, Libreville. – Former brother-in-law rival –
Ping has pledged to ensure, if elected, that Gabon would be “sheltered
from need and fear,” dismissing the president’s much-touted moves to
diversify the economy into rubber and palm oil as mere window dressing.
Despite boasting one of Africa’s highest per capita incomes at $8,300, a
third of Gabon’s population live in poverty.
Unemployment among
the young, according to the World Bank, runs at 35 percent. Recent
months have seen growing popular unrest and numerous public sector
strikes as well as thousands of layoffs in the oil sector. Fears that
this discontent might degenerate into violence are fuelled by memories
of what followed Bongo’s contested victory in the 2009 presidential
poll. Several people were killed, buildings looted, a ceasefire imposed
and the French consulate in the economic capital Port-Gentil torched.
On
Friday, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on “all political
stakeholders, in particular the candidates, to exercise restraint,
abstain from any acts of incitement or the use of inflammatory
statements, and maintain a peaceful atmosphere before, during and after
the election.” He also urged the candidates to use “legal and
constitutional channels” in the event of any dispute over the result.
Ping and Bongo go back a long way, having worked for years together
under Bongo senior, who was responsible for getting Ping his job as
chairman of the AU Commission. Ping also has close family ties to the
Bongo dynasty: he was formerly married to Omar Bongo’s eldest daughter
with whom he had two children.
Ping turned on Bongo in 2014, and
in March he told French daily Le Monde that “Gabon is a pure and simple
dictatorship in the hands of a family, a clan.”
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