Berliner Boersenzeitung - Junta chief frontrunner as Gabon holds first election since 2023 coup

EUR -
AED 4.162572
AFN 82.230718
ALL 99.559789
AMD 443.026253
ANG 2.028765
AOA 1040.362007
ARS 1355.593196
AUD 1.791511
AWG 2.042759
AZN 1.920974
BAM 1.946349
BBD 2.28809
BDT 137.691422
BGN 1.954232
BHD 0.427127
BIF 3314.879559
BMD 1.133292
BND 1.490761
BOB 7.85884
BRL 6.636597
BSD 1.133198
BTN 97.436158
BWP 15.642048
BYN 3.708592
BYR 22212.526278
BZD 2.276347
CAD 1.574976
CDF 3258.214799
CHF 0.925556
CLF 0.028541
CLP 1095.247946
CNY 8.327952
CNH 8.286462
COP 4883.639228
CRC 581.37705
CUC 1.133292
CUP 30.032242
CVE 110.612842
CZK 25.099362
DJF 201.800134
DKK 7.463924
DOP 69.354546
DZD 149.971412
EGP 57.79167
ERN 16.999382
ETB 147.328373
FJD 2.610767
FKP 0.868384
GBP 0.860225
GEL 3.11648
GGP 0.868384
GHS 17.622207
GIP 0.868384
GMD 81.035338
GNF 9809.776683
GTQ 8.740559
GYD 237.787491
HKD 8.789939
HNL 29.182559
HRK 7.531817
HTG 148.280008
HUF 410.398523
IDR 19024.57544
ILS 4.173383
IMP 0.868384
INR 97.514067
IQD 1484.612726
IRR 47725.762543
ISK 145.106201
JEP 0.868384
JMD 179.398906
JOD 0.803846
JPY 162.4036
KES 146.797756
KGS 99.106493
KHR 4550.167696
KMF 491.266048
KPW 1019.962955
KRW 1613.706027
KWD 0.347626
KYD 0.944423
KZT 586.810667
LAK 24544.274636
LBP 101542.977249
LKR 337.839577
LRD 226.375337
LSL 21.696915
LTL 3.346317
LVL 0.685517
LYD 6.300915
MAD 10.592902
MDL 19.604979
MGA 5242.019102
MKD 61.500154
MMK 2379.424748
MNT 4006.027823
MOP 9.052445
MRU 44.934499
MUR 50.998597
MVR 17.464012
MWK 1968.528456
MXN 22.75843
MYR 5.003485
MZN 72.422736
NAD 21.351275
NGN 1819.183418
NIO 41.648428
NOK 11.988407
NPR 155.897454
NZD 1.929685
OMR 0.436274
PAB 1.133198
PEN 4.238574
PGK 4.628358
PHP 64.659945
PKR 317.863147
PLN 4.280954
PYG 9066.974164
QAR 4.12575
RON 4.975494
RSD 117.14158
RUB 93.212909
RWF 1604.741694
SAR 4.25312
SBD 9.483782
SCR 16.171525
SDG 680.542771
SEK 11.090255
SGD 1.492257
SHP 0.89059
SLE 25.782165
SLL 23764.551485
SOS 647.674838
SRD 42.102015
STD 23456.859543
SVC 9.915852
SYP 14734.832839
SZL 21.696851
THB 38.08107
TJS 12.318395
TMT 3.977855
TND 3.385714
TOP 2.654285
TRY 43.118819
TTD 7.691652
TWD 36.686706
TZS 3034.390747
UAH 46.786025
UGX 4155.820888
USD 1.133292
UYU 48.673659
UZS 14710.132176
VES 87.397281
VND 29272.936417
VUV 139.313184
WST 3.202299
XAF 652.787309
XAG 0.035153
XAU 0.000353
XCD 3.062779
XDR 0.815222
XOF 652.205632
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.024898
ZAR 21.433971
ZMK 10201.050706
ZMW 32.099139
ZWL 364.919612
  • RBGPF

    -4.5500

    63.45

    -7.17%

  • SCS

    0.0500

    10.23

    +0.49%

  • NGG

    1.3300

    69.39

    +1.92%

  • RIO

    0.1500

    57.01

    +0.26%

  • GSK

    0.6400

    35.28

    +1.81%

  • AZN

    1.7200

    68.01

    +2.53%

  • BP

    0.3200

    26.91

    +1.19%

  • BTI

    0.4400

    42.01

    +1.05%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    21.81

    +0.05%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    21.91

    +0.05%

  • RELX

    1.0000

    50.12

    +2%

  • BCE

    0.2900

    21.65

    +1.34%

  • JRI

    0.2200

    12.13

    +1.81%

  • RYCEF

    0.2500

    9.38

    +2.67%

  • BCC

    -0.7500

    94.91

    -0.79%

  • VOD

    0.2300

    8.96

    +2.57%

Junta chief frontrunner as Gabon holds first election since 2023 coup
Junta chief frontrunner as Gabon holds first election since 2023 coup / Photo: Daniel Beloumou Olomo - AFP

Junta chief frontrunner as Gabon holds first election since 2023 coup

Gabonese voters began casting ballots on Saturday in a presidential election with eight candidates that is widely expected to make junta chief Brice Oligui Nguema the oil-rich central African country's first elected leader since his 2023 coup.

Text size:

Oligui, the general who led the August 30, 2023, putsch that ended 55 years of iron-fisted dynastic rule by the Bongo family, who were accused of looting Gabon's wealth, has been leading in opinion polls.

Snaking queues were seen outside polling stations in Libreville, the seaside capital.

Aurele Ossantanga Mouila, 30, voted for the first time ever after finishing his shift as a croupier in a casino.

"I did not have confidence in the earlier regime," he said.

Oligui took the role of transitional president while overseeing the formation of a government that includes civilians, tasked with drawing up a new constitution.

The country of 2.3 million people is casting ballots at a time of high unemployment, regular power and water shortages, a lack of infrastructure and heavy government debt.

Despite successive plans, only 2,000 of the 10,000 kilometres (6,213 miles) of roads in the country are "usable", according to official data. Derailments are frequent on the sole rail link and youth unemployment exceeds 60 percent in rural areas.

Oligui ditched his military uniform as he campaigned for a seven-year term against seven rivals, including Alain-Claude Bilie By Nze, who served as prime minister under Ali Bongo before the coup.

- 'The special candidate' -

Around 920,000 voters are eligible to cast their ballots from 7:00 am (0600 GMT), with the polling stations closing at 6:00 pm and final results expected on Monday.

Oligui has predicted a "historic victory" in the election.

"The builder is here, the special candidate, the one you called," Oligui said Thursday among the music and dancing at his closing rally in the capital Libreville.

But critics accuse Oligui, who had promised to hand power back to civilians, of failing to move on from the years of plunder of the country's vast mineral wealth under the Bongos, whom he served for years.

Oligui's image has been plastered all over the capital Libreville alongside his campaign slogan "C'BON" -- a play on the French words for "It's good" and the junta chief's initials -- while those of his rivals are nowhere to be seen.

Bilie By Nze, his main opponent, has cast himself as the candidate for a "complete rupture".

He has accused Oligui, who led the Republican Guard in the Bongo years, of representing a continuity of the old system.

Oligui served as patriarch Omar Bongo's former aide-de-camp before becoming chief of the presidential guard under his son Ali Bongo.

- 'Transparent ballot' -

Whoever wins will have to meet the high hopes of a country where one in three people lives below the poverty line despite its vast resource wealth, according to the World Bank.

Gabon's debt rose to 73.3 percent of GDP last year and is projected to reach 80 percent this year.

Analyst Neyer Kenga likewise pointed to "the return to constitutional order" as one of the key campaign issues, in the hope the vote puts an end to the country's strife.

In the past weeks, the interior ministry has been at pains to insist Saturday's vote will be "a transparent ballot and an election accessible" to all.

"Today all Gabonese are firmly in favour of a democratic game that is played within the rules," said Neyer Kenga.

Following years marked by a post-vote crisis in 2009 and 2016's bloodily repressed protests -- not to mention the August 2023 coup -- "the people's response at the ballot box is never known in advance", she added.

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)