Dubai Telegraph - Gabon's strongman vows more democracy after coup

EUR -
AED 4.362074
AFN 75.416814
ALL 96.402807
AMD 447.651302
ANG 2.12547
AOA 1089.022044
ARS 1661.744726
AUD 1.678255
AWG 2.137665
AZN 2.023621
BAM 1.958648
BBD 2.392139
BDT 145.251191
BGN 1.956731
BHD 0.447774
BIF 3521.20945
BMD 1.187592
BND 1.501195
BOB 8.207452
BRL 6.207369
BSD 1.187657
BTN 107.581308
BWP 15.664105
BYN 3.403749
BYR 23276.797713
BZD 2.388623
CAD 1.615428
CDF 2678.019758
CHF 0.911905
CLF 0.025955
CLP 1024.856497
CNY 8.204656
CNH 8.196075
COP 4354.554436
CRC 576.044826
CUC 1.187592
CUP 31.471181
CVE 110.806932
CZK 24.266003
DJF 211.059268
DKK 7.471437
DOP 73.957322
DZD 153.914743
EGP 55.641527
ERN 17.813876
ETB 184.437594
FJD 2.623989
FKP 0.871316
GBP 0.870018
GEL 3.195086
GGP 0.871316
GHS 13.08137
GIP 0.871316
GMD 87.292565
GNF 10427.055724
GTQ 9.109245
GYD 248.486985
HKD 9.284058
HNL 31.475739
HRK 7.53373
HTG 155.724451
HUF 379.495533
IDR 20004.982524
ILS 3.670526
IMP 0.871316
INR 107.563512
IQD 1556.338949
IRR 50027.301394
ISK 145.009478
JEP 0.871316
JMD 185.870249
JOD 0.84205
JPY 181.447435
KES 153.199749
KGS 103.855352
KHR 4776.494314
KMF 492.85098
KPW 1068.767503
KRW 1713.006504
KWD 0.36414
KYD 0.98976
KZT 587.731967
LAK 25467.904851
LBP 106348.838945
LKR 367.233946
LRD 221.371576
LSL 18.930665
LTL 3.50665
LVL 0.718363
LYD 7.487812
MAD 10.862948
MDL 20.166746
MGA 5231.341939
MKD 61.660011
MMK 2493.437388
MNT 4253.442725
MOP 9.56483
MRU 47.389355
MUR 54.522785
MVR 18.348741
MWK 2062.257459
MXN 20.380868
MYR 4.640519
MZN 75.89154
NAD 18.954412
NGN 1606.788293
NIO 43.589037
NOK 11.276308
NPR 172.120257
NZD 1.96477
OMR 0.456631
PAB 1.187767
PEN 3.983781
PGK 5.098035
PHP 68.765959
PKR 331.99171
PLN 4.211106
PYG 7789.325428
QAR 4.324319
RON 5.095129
RSD 117.372746
RUB 91.023498
RWF 1729.133544
SAR 4.453494
SBD 9.546656
SCR 16.127462
SDG 714.340785
SEK 10.596739
SGD 1.498694
SHP 0.891001
SLE 29.037058
SLL 24903.203802
SOS 678.713017
SRD 44.836383
STD 24580.750867
STN 24.701908
SVC 10.39211
SYP 13134.259572
SZL 18.93065
THB 36.894957
TJS 11.206007
TMT 4.156571
TND 3.373198
TOP 2.859436
TRY 51.932797
TTD 8.061823
TWD 37.279736
TZS 3087.73887
UAH 51.218971
UGX 4204.112644
USD 1.187592
UYU 45.786765
UZS 14601.440595
VES 466.40298
VND 30841.75697
VUV 141.709478
WST 3.208857
XAF 656.917669
XAG 0.015245
XAU 0.000237
XCD 3.209526
XCG 2.140439
XDR 0.816437
XOF 656.148692
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.062918
ZAR 18.926572
ZMK 10689.754847
ZMW 21.58675
ZWL 382.404049
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    23.79

    +0.38%

  • JRI

    0.1235

    13.15

    +0.94%

  • RYCEF

    0.6300

    17.5

    +3.6%

  • GSK

    0.5750

    59.115

    +0.97%

  • BCC

    -1.0600

    87

    -1.22%

  • RIO

    0.1700

    98.08

    +0.17%

  • BCE

    0.0450

    25.875

    +0.17%

  • BTI

    -0.8200

    59.79

    -1.37%

  • NGG

    1.3650

    92.585

    +1.47%

  • AZN

    0.5180

    205.038

    +0.25%

  • RELX

    2.2000

    31.01

    +7.09%

  • CMSD

    0.0547

    23.63

    +0.23%

  • BP

    0.4250

    37.615

    +1.13%

  • VOD

    -0.0850

    15.535

    -0.55%

Gabon's strongman vows more democracy after coup
Gabon's strongman vows more democracy after coup / Photo: - - AFP

Gabon's strongman vows more democracy after coup

Gabon's new strongman General Brice Oligui Nguema on Friday vowed the country's institutions would be more democratic, two days after heading a coup that ended 55 years of rule by the Bongo family.

Text size:

"The dissolution of the institutions" decreed on Wednesday during the coup "is temporary", he said in a speech. "It is a question of reorganising them in order to make them more democratic."

Oligui also stepped up contacts with national groups and foreign interests, meeting members of civil society a day after a speech to 200 businessmen, whom he lectured on corruption.

Broadcast on state television earlier Friday, he sternly warned business leaders in the oil-rich state against "over-billing" and told them to commit to the "development of the country.

"It is difficult to perceive, at this stage, your commitment or patriotism when it comes to the development expected by our compatriots," Oligui said.

He vowed to make sure the overcharged money "comes back to the state.

"This situation, for me, cannot continue, and I will not tolerate it".

He also invited foreign donors, diplomats and members of international organisations to meet with him. Details of that meeting remained unclear.

Embassies of countries or organisations that have condemned the coup told AFP that they did not send their seniormost representatives, but rather officials of a lesser rank.

- Bongo overthrown -

Oligui, the head of the elite Republican Guard, on Wednesday led officers in a coup against President Ali Bongo Ondimba, scion of a family that had ruled for 55 years.

The ouster came just moments after Bongo, 64, was proclaimed victor in presidential elections at the weekend -- a result branded a fraud by the opposition.

The coup leaders said they had dissolved the nation's institutions, cancelled the election results and closed the borders.

Oligui is due on Monday to be sworn in as "transitional president".

But other countries have not acknowledged him as Gabon's legitimate leader and he faces pressure to spell out his plans for restoring civilian rule.

Five other countries in Africa -- Mali, Guinea, Sudan, Burkina Faso and Niger -- have undergone coups in the last three years. Their new rulers have resisted demands for a short timetable for returning to barracks.

- Dynasty -

Bongo had been seeking his third term in office after coming to power in 2009 following the death of his father Omar.

The coup leaders said Wednesday they had put him under house arrest and placed him "in retirement".

However, he was able to distribute a video on social media in which he said his son and wife Sylvia had been detained, and appealed to "all friends that we have all over the world... to make noise" on his behalf.

National TV on Friday showed rolling images of the deposed president's son Noureddin Bongo Valentin and other arrested officials in front of suitcases filled with cash allegedly seized from their homes.

The military has accused them of treason, embezzlement, corruption and falsifying the president's signature, among other allegations.

In Paris, lawyers for Sylvia Bongo, a Franco-Gabonese, said they had filed a lawsuit over her "arbitrary detention" and that of her son Jalil.

"She is being held in an unknown place in Gabon," attorney Francois Zimeray told AFP, saying her lawyers were demanding they be given access to the French consulate in Libreville.

A stroke in 2018 sidelined Bongo from public life for 10 months and led to a very brief, and still unexplained, attempt on power by soldiers.

The elder Bongo ruled for 41 years, gaining a reputation as a kleptocrat and a pillar of "Francafrique" -- the now-condemned policy whereby France furthered its political and commercial interests in Africa through cronyism.

G.Koya--DT