LIBREVILLE, Gabon
Ali Bongo Ondimba who was deposed in a coup in August last year has adressed Gabonese.
In an open letter, the former
president announced his decision to definitely quit politics and called for the
liberation of his wife, and his son Sylvia and Nourredin Bongo and the end of
their "torture".
Both have been detained and
indicted following the fall of the Bongo dynasty.
Ali Bongo judges that they
have been imprisonned "for crimes for which their guilt has yet to be
established and have become "scapegoats of a situation that goes beyond
their individual being"
In the letter circulated in
the media Wednesday (Sep. 18), Bongo admits "inadequacies on the social
and institutional level" during his terms , saying he his the "sole
responsible".
He finally calls for
"national reconciliation".
The move has drwned mixed
reactions. In Libreville, many residents are skeptic.
"The substance of his
message is not genuine. To me, it's as his regret is calculated. If he were
truly sincere, he would ask for the liberation of people he jailed while
president," one says.
"I have mixed feelings,
if we respond with the heart, it will be very complicated. yet, our reverence
of our christian faith would ask for us to forgive. You see, it is
diffucult," another one adds.
"We forgive him. In
Gabon, we are united. I would like for him to be forgiven so that we can start
afresh," a third says in contrast.
"Most Gabonese question
the former president's sincerity and intentions.They ask: why is he only
interested in the fate of his jailed wife and son. What about members of the
group known as the Young Team who gravitated around Slvia and are also in jail?
Or what about the Gabonese perceived to be political prisoners jailed under
Bongo?," Africanews correspondant Géraud Wilfriend Obangome reports.
Former
Gabonese first Lady Silvya Bongo Valentin who is 61 has been charged with money
laundering, receiving stolen goods as well as forgery and fraud.
Noureddin Bongo Valentin has
already been charged with corruption and embezzling public funds with several
former cabinet members and two ex-ministers.
No charge is held against
former president Bongo.
However he insists "he is
no free of his movements" contrary to what the junta has repeated.
Bongo says "vists he
receives depend on authorization from the military officers".
Adding he is left with
"no news form his family"
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