ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia
The African Union’s Peace and Security Council said it has decided to “immediately suspend” Gabon following the military coup in the country this week.
The body said on X, formerly
Twitter, that it “strongly condemns the military takeover of power in the Republic of Gabon” and has decided “to immediately suspend the participation of
Gabon in all activities of the AU, its organs and institutions”.
The announcement came after a
meeting of the council on the situation in Gabon following Wednesday’s coup
that followed disputed elections in which President Ali Bongo Ondimba was
declared the winner.
It said the meeting was
chaired by African Union commissioner for political affairs Bankole Adeoye of
Nigeria and the current holder of the council’s rotating chair, Burundi’s Willy
Nyamitwe.
The takeover ended the Bongo
family’s almost six decades in power and created a new conundrum for a region
that has struggled to deal with eight coups since 2020.
Nigeria’s recently elected
president Bola Tinubu called it a “contagion of autocracy”.
“My fear has been confirmed in
Gabon that copy cats will start doing the same thing until it is stopped,”
Tinubu, who chairs West Africa’s main regional body ECOWAS, said on Thursday.
The general who overthrew
Gabon’s Bongo dynasty will be sworn in on Monday as transitional president, the
army said, as the opposition called for its candidate to be recognised as the
winner of weekend elections.
The military sought to
reassure donors they would “respect all commitments” at home and abroad and
“phase in” transitional institutions, Colonel Ulrich Manfoumbi Manfoumbi,
spokesman for the new regime, said on state television.
The swearing-in of new leader
General Brice Oligui Nguema will take place at the constitutional court, said
the spokesman, providing the first indication of how the Committee for the
Transition and Restoration of Institutions (CTRI) would operate following
Wednesday’s putsch.
ECCAS condemned the coup,
saying in a statement that it planned an “imminent” meeting of heads of state
to determine how to respond. It did not give a date.
Senior officers in Gabon
announced their coup before dawn on Wednesday, shortly after an election body
declared that Bongo had comfortably won a third term after Saturday’s vote.
Later on Wednesday, a video
emerged of Bongo detained in his residence, asking international allies for
help but apparently unaware of what was happening around him. The officers also
announced that Nguema,
former head of the presidential guard, had been chosen as head of state.
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