Gabon’s Bongo seeks third term in nationwide poll
Voters in Gabon headed to the polls on Saturday for a triple election in which President Ali Bongo Ondimba, scion of a family that has ruled for 55 years, is seeking victory over a belatedly unite main rival Albert Ondo Ossa lead a race of 14 candidates vying for the top job in the small oil-rich central African state.
Even before voting stations opened at 7:00 am (0600 GMT), a handful of people were waiting to cast their ballots at five schools in the centre of Libreville — though most of the streets, decked out in the colours of Bongo’s governing party, were still empty, an AFP journalist saw.
The 64-year-old incumbent took office in 2009, succeeding his father Omar, who died after more than 41 years in power.
But shortly ahead of the elections, a storm erupted over a purported conversation between Ondo Ossa and a fellow opposition figure.
The conversation — recorded without the pair’s knowledge and disseminated on social media — refers to various strategies “to create a power struggle” and support from other countries.
Bongo has accused the pair of treason, saying the remarks reflect a plot to take over with the help of “foreign powers”.
At an eve-of-election rally attended by tens of thousands of supporters in Libreville, Bongo charged that the two sought to “destroy this country”.
“We won’t let them to do it,” he said. (AFP)