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Wednesday 30 August 2023

Gen. Brice Oligui Nguema is new military leader of Gabon (WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT HIM)






Military officers who toppled the 14 year old government of President Ali Bongo have named General Brice Oligui Nguema, as the new head of state.


The man toppled is now under house arrest in his palace, with his wife and son also detained in undisclosed locations.


Saying they represented the armed forces, the officers declared on television that the election results were cancelled, borders closed and state institutions dissolved, after a tense vote that was set to extend the Bongo family’s more than half century in power.


Within hours, generals met to discuss who would lead the transition and agreed by unanimous vote to appoint General Oligui Nguema, former head of the presidential guard, according to another televised address.


Nguema is also reported to be a cousin of Ali Bongo.





Who is Brice Oligui Nguema, Gabon’s interim leader?


Nguema heads the Gabonese Presidency’s Republican Guard, the country’s most powerful security unit.


Minutes after Gabon’s electoral commission announced on Wednesday that President Ali Bongo Ondimba had won a third term in office, senior military officers announced a coup and annulled the election results.


According to local media reports, Brice Clothaire Oligui Nguema, the commander-in-chief of the Gabonese Republican Guard – the country’s most powerful security unit – and a cousin to Bongo, is the ringleader of the attempted coup.


He was later named as the country’s transition leader.



Here’s what we know about him so far.


A powerful figure


Nguema is one of the most influential and enigmatic figures in the country today. The son of a military officer, he trained at the Royal Military Academy of Meknes, in Morocco.


Nguema then served as Bongo’s “aides-de-camp” to a commander in former President Omar Bongo’s Republican Guard, until the former Gabonese leader’s death in 2009.


When Omar Bongo’s son Ali Bongo rose to power in October 2009, Nguema was sent to Morocco and Senegal for diplomatic missions. A decade later, he took over as the head of the guard.


The guard, whose military officers are recognisable by their green berets, is responsible for presidential security. As its head, Nguema tried to fortify Gabon’s internal security systems with reforms that were seen as elongating Bongo’s stay in power.


According to local media reports, Nguema also composed a song that included the line: “I would defend my president with honour and loyalty”.


A businessman


Besides military and diplomatic duties, Nguema was seen as entrepreneurial and also believed to be a millionaire in Gabonese circles.


According to a 2020 investigation by The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) on the Bongo family’s assets in the United States, Nguema invested in real estate, paying in cash.


“He bought three properties in middle- and working-class neighbourhoods in the Maryland suburbs of Hyattsville and Silver Spring, just outside the capital, in 2015 and 2018. The homes were purchased with a total of over $1 million in cash,” the OCCRP report said.


When reporters questioned Nguema about these properties, he said it was a private affair.


“I think whether in France or in the United States, a private life is a private life that [should be] respected.”




Nguema for President?


In an interview with French daily Le Monde on Wednesday, Nguema echoed those thoughts.


“Beyond this discontent, there is the illness of the Head of State [Ali Bongo suffered a stroke in October 2018 which left him weakened]. Everyone talks about it, but no one takes responsibility. He did not have the right to serve a third term, the Constitution was violated, the method of election itself was not good. So the army decided to turn the page, to take its responsibilities,” Nguema said.


He added that Ali Bongo can retire and continue to enjoy his rights like every other Gabonese citizen, adding that the generals would meet to decide on a successor to Bongo at 14:00 GMT on Wednesday.


And while Bongo is currently under house arrest after winning the cancelled election with 64.27 percent of the vote, Gabon’s soldiers have apparently begun celebrating Nguema.


Unverified videos and images on social media showed a group of soldiers dancing with Nguema and calling him Gabon’s “next strongman.”



Meanwhile, from detention in his residence, Bongo appealed in a video statement to foreign allies, imploring them to speak out on his and his family’s behalf.



Bongo’s plight was a dramatic reversal from the early hours of Wednesday when the electoral commission declared him the winner of Saturday’s disputed vote.


Hundreds of people celebrated the military’s intervention in the streets of the Gabonese capital Libreville, while the United Nations, African Union and France, Gabon’s former colonial ruler which has troops stationed there, condemned the coup.


The military takeover in Gabon is the eighth in West and Central Africa since 2020, and the second – after Niger – in as many months.


Military officers have also seized power in Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso and Chad, erasing democratic gains since the 1990s and raising fear among foreign powers that have strategic interests in the region.


SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES





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