News

BREAKING: Coup in Gabon As Military Takes Over Power After Presidential Election [Video]

 

The Gabonese President, Ali Bongo, has been deposed by the military, days after winning the presidential election.

According to the BBC, soldiers were said to have appeared on Gabonese national television in Gabon to announce that they had taken power.

The coupists also announced the annulment of Saturday’s election and the dissolution of the democratic institutions in the country.

Speaking on Gabon 1 and Gabon 24, the spokesman of the coupist said he was speaking on behalf of the “Committee for the Transition and Restoration of Institutions”.

He said: “We have decided to defend peace by putting an end to the current regime. To this end, the general elections of 26 August 2023 and the truncated results are cancelled.

“All the institutions of the republic are dissolved: the government, the Senate, the National Assembly and the Constitutional Court. Also, the country’s borders have been closed until further notice.”

Among the soldiers were members of the Republican Guard as well as soldiers of the regular army and police officers.

Bongo, who came to power after the death of his father in 2009, won a third term in an election which opposition argued was heavily disputed.

The development comes amid the move to resolve the removal of a democratically elected president in Niger Republic.

Both the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and African Union (AU), which have rejected the coup in Niger, are yet to react to the coup in Gabon as of the time of filing this report.

This online news platform understands that Gabon Military officers are saying they were annulling the results of Saturday’s election, in which President Ali Bongo was declared the winner.

The electoral commission said Mr Bongo had won just under two-thirds of the votes in an election the opposition argued was fraudulent. His overthrow would end his family’s 53-year hold on power in Gabon.

Truetells Nigeria reports that twelve soldiers appeared on television announcing they were cancelling the results of the election and dissolving “all the institutions of the republic”.

One of the soldiers said on TV channel Gabon 24: “We have decided to defend peace by putting an end to the current regime.”

This, he added, was down to “irresponsible, unpredictable governance resulting in a continuing deterioration in social cohesion that risks leading the country into chaos”.

Truetells Nigeria reports that Ali Bongo came to power when his father Omar died in 2009.

TruetellsNigeria

Recent Posts

FirstBank Hosts Inaugural China-Africa Interbank Association Forum

FirstBank, the premier West African financial institution and financial inclusion service provider has announced its…

1 hour ago

ZENITH BANK HOLDS FOURTH EDITION OF ANNUAL TECH FAIR IN LAGOS

The Fourth Edition of the Zenith Bank Tech Fair, tagged “Future Forward 4.0: Embedded Finance,…

1 hour ago

SIFAX Group Chairman Donates Building to Alma Mater

  Dr. Taiwo Afolabi, Chairman of SIFAX Group, has donated a fully equipped building to…

15 hours ago

Dangote Cement Ibese Fetes Senior Citizens in Host Communities

Dangote Cement, Ibese Plant at the weekend extended the frontier of its social investments in…

19 hours ago