Daily Dispatch

Discontent unlikely to unseat Gabon president

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GABON voted on Saturday amid discontent over its failure to raise living standards despite oil wealth, in a poll posing the biggest challenge yet to President Ali Bongo, whose family has run the central African nation for half a century.

With state machinery and entrenched patronage networks behind him, Bongo, 57, is likely to be returned, seven years after winning his first election following the death of his father Omar, who ruled for 42 years.

Polls closed at 7pm (6pm GMT), an hour late to allow people who were still waiting to vote to do so. Voting was mostly calm, although witnesses said a few scuffles broke out in one area as tempers flared in long queues to cast ballots.

Results were not expected until today or tomorrow.

Bongo faced nine other candidates – compared with 22 in the last poll – but his main rival was veteran diplomat Jean Ping.

“The day of glory has arrived and we are preparing as you can see to celebrate vict Ping, 73, said shortly after voting in Martine Oulabou school, in the capital Libreville.

Ping faces an uphill struggle, not least because Gabon’s one-round system means the winner doesn’t need a majority, just more votes than any other candidate.

In 2009, Bongo won with 41.73%. “I have laid out the change achieved and the change to come in the future. For that reason, I’m confident,” said Bongo after voting.

Bongo has made saving Gabon’s unique wildlife, including pristine equatorial rainforest and elephants, a priority, but voters complain they have more pressing worries.

Ping, meanwhile, has harnessed discontent over the lack of a significan­t rise in living standards in the population of just under two million, despite its oil riches.

“The Gabonese are suffering. We are not well paid, our children don’t live in good conditions. That’s why I voted for change,” Marie Ange N’no, 40, a civil servant, said outside a polling station in Libreville.

Gabon has just rejoined Opec after two decades and has a GDP per capita of $10 000 (R143 678) a year, making it one of Africa’s richest countries, yet much of that wealth is concentrat­ed in the hands of the elite.

About a fifth of Gabonese live on less than $2 (R28) a day and nearly a third live below its own national poverty line, according to the latest available data, from 2005.

Bongo on Thursday promised “a merciless fight against poverty”.

But Gabon faces a financial squeeze owing to a long-term decline in oil output – which shrunk GDP per capita by nearly a fifth between 1980 and 2014, according to the United Nations Developmen­t Programme – and a sharp fall in the price of crude over the past two years. Efforts to diversify into agricultur­e and tourism have yet to bear much fruit.

Oil wealth has flowed mostly to the elite and has trickled down slightly only via its bloated civil service.

During his father’s rule, Gabon was a pillar of “La Francafriq­ue”, an intricate, shadowy web of diplomacy, commerce and French military might that kept African autocrats in power and gave French companies privileged access to them.

Bongo has tried to shake off this legacy by presenting a modern face with a developmen­t programme run by technocrat­s.

“As (Omar Bongo’s) son, it is difficult to present yourself as something new and technocrat­ic when the whiff of corruption hangs over from the last administra­tion,” said Anthony Goldman, head of West Africa-focused P M Consulting.

The mixed-race son of a wealthy Chinese trader, Ping is a former foreign minister and African Union Commission chairman who was once close to Omar Bongo and even had a relationsh­ip with his daughter, Pascaline, fathering two children by her.

That limits how much leverage he can get out of dissatisfa­ction with the Bongo family. Ping fell out with “Bongo Junior”, as Gabonese call the president, leaving the ruling party in 2014 to become an outspoken critic.

Opposition campaigner­s have questioned whether Bongo is really Gabonese or an adopted child from eastern Nigeria, something he denies. — Reuters

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