Kuwait Times

Gabon anti-graft drive reshuffles political pack

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LIBREVILLE, Gabon: The oil-rich central African state of Gabon has carried out a string of top-level arrests and reassignme­nts as it ramps up a drive against corruption. Nearly two dozen people, some of them in the inner circle of power, have been ousted from office, arrested or given other duties. A leading figure is President Ali Bongo Ondimba’s chief of staff, Brice Laccruche Alihanga, who has been dismissed from his job, although he retains the rank of minister.

Others are the former director of the National Fund for Health Insurance (CNAMGS), Renaud Allogho Akoue and the head of presidenti­al communicat­ions, Ike Ngouoni, who was regarded as Laccruche’s right-hand man. Both have been arrested. Key changes have also been made in the intelligen­ce and security forces, under decisions carried out by the president’s office. Laccruche adopted a low profile as government minister, though his influence steadily grew after Bongo suffered a stroke in October 2018.

The pro-government daily L’Union reported on Wednesday that more than 85 billion CFA francs ($142 million), had disappeare­d from the funds of the Gabon Oil Company (GOC) over the

past two years. GOC is a state firm run by Patrichi Tanasa, who is close to Laccruche. Tanasa has been in custody since late November. An investigat­ion by L’Union also targeted the Dupont Consulting Company, whose executives included Laccruche’s brother Gregory Laccruche, a businessma­n and mayor of Akanda, a coastal town northwest of Libreville. Gregory Laccruche was detained on Wednesday, a source close to the presidency told AFP.

‘Vendetta’

The public prosecutor said that suspects have been charged with embezzleme­nt and money laundering. “This is a political vendetta,” declared Boris Rosenthal, aide to detained presidenti­al spokesman Ngouoni. Bongo’s office said the inquiry has no political link. “Whatever your position, if there are suspicions against you, you do not have impunity. Now it’s up to the judiciary to do its work and to decide,” said Jessye Ella Ekogha, who has replaced Ngouoni.

Current investigat­ions are a follow-up to Operation Mamba, an anti-corruption campaign launched by Bongo in 2017, Ekogha said. Bongo himself chaired an extraordin­ary council of the judiciary last Friday, a first in his 10 years in office, which began with an election in 2009 after the death of his father, Omar Bongo, ruler of Gabon for 41 years. After the council session, Libreville’s chief prosecutor Olivier N’Zahou lost his position in the capital to be appointed general attorney of Francevill­e, at the far end of the country.

“Mr N’Zahou is hiding because he is being followed and has the impression that someone wants to do away with him,” said lawyer Anges Kevin Nzigou, who represents about a dozen suspects. “The common point in all these arrests is Laccruche Alihanga. You perfectly know this yourselves. The starting piont for all these arrests is Laccruche Alihanga’s dismissal,” he said. Earlier this year, Bongo appointed Lee White, a British-born green activist who has lived in Gabon for three decades and become a citizen, as new minister of water and forests.

His predecesso­r, Guy Bertrand Mapangou, was fired over a scandal involving illegal logging of kevazingo, a precious and protected wood, by a Chinese firm. Running in parallel with this political upheaval is continuing speculatio­n about Bongo’s health. Part of the Gabonese opposition continues to call for an expert assessment on his condition to see if he is fit to run the country. —AFP

 ??  ?? LIBREVILLE: In this file photo taken on Aug 17, 2019, Gabon’s President Ali Bongo and his wife Sylvia Bongo are flanked by then Bongo’s cabinet director Brice Laccruche Alihanga (second right) during the country’s independen­ce day celebratio­n. —AFP
LIBREVILLE: In this file photo taken on Aug 17, 2019, Gabon’s President Ali Bongo and his wife Sylvia Bongo are flanked by then Bongo’s cabinet director Brice Laccruche Alihanga (second right) during the country’s independen­ce day celebratio­n. —AFP

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