By Thomas Naadi, LIBREVILLE
Gabon
The leader of Gabon's military junta has vowed to return power to civilians after "free, transparent" elections.
However, in a speech after
being sworn in as interim president, he did not give a date for military rule
to end.
General Brice Nguema led last
Wednesday's coup against Ali Bongo, toppling the president shortly after he was
named winner of a disputed election.
Crowds of cheering civilians
turned up at the inauguration - the coup was welcomed by many eager for change.
However, some say Gen Nguema's
rule will be a continuation of the 55-year Bongo dynasty.
Ali Bongo's father, Omar, was
in power for 41 years before he died in 2009 and was succeeded by his son.
The general, aged 48, spent
most his career in the Bongo's inner circle and is even thought to be Ali
Bongo's cousin.
At Monday's inauguration, Gen
Nguema gave a defiant speech, referencing the likes of South African Archbishop
Desmond Tutu, French statesman Charles Fe Gaulle and former Ghanaian leader
Jerry Rawlings.
"This patriotic action
will be a lesson learnt that will be taught in the books of our schools,"
said the new president, dressed in the red ceremonial costume of the Republican
Guard.
He added that a fresh
government would be formed "in a few days" and recommended new
electoral legislation, a new penal code and a referendum on a new constitution.
Gen Nguema also said he had instructed the new government "to think without delay" about freeing all political prisoners.
The ceremony was broadcast
live on Gabonese TV and across online platforms.
Hundreds of officials
attended, including former ministers from the ousted government, who were booed
by a crowd of junta sympathisers.
The opposition has said it
welcomes the removal of Mr Bongo from power but has called for a speedy return
to civilian rule.
The defeated presidential
candidate Albert Ondo Ossa told the Associated Press that the coup was a
"palace revolution", engineered by the Bongo family to retain their
power.
Gen Nguema's is the latest in
a series of military takeovers across West and Central Africa.
Gabon is the sixth Francophone
country to fall under military rule in the last three years as former colonial
power France struggles to maintain its influence on the continent.
Gabon was suspended from the
African Union following the coup, which has been condemned by the UN and
France.
In his inauguration address on
Monday, Gen Nguema said he was "surprised" at foreign criticism of
the takeover.
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