Gabon coup: This shouldn't be mistaken for folks energy

Another day, one other coup on the continent.

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Chad, Sudan, Guinea, Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and now Gabon.

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Gunfire was heard in Libreville moments after President Ali Bongo, the ruler for 14 years, had his re-election success introduced on Wednesday morning.

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Hours later, military officers took to state television to sentence the disputed election, declare their takeover and dissolve the federal government.

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Shortly afterward, their former ruler appeared in a video message from home arrest interesting for international intervention. It is difficult to not discover the opulent interiors behind him, glimmering beneath the gentle however brilliant yellow lighting.

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The Bongo household has held energy in Gabon since 1967. The ousted president is the third the nation has seen since its independence from France in 1960.

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His father Omar Bongo was Gabon's second president and held energy for 42 years till his dying in 2009.

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The 2009 election that transferred energy from father to son was marred in controversy and allegations of fraud. Bongo's re-election in 2016 was additionally closely disputed.

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Now, his newest contested victory to safe a 3rd time period in workplace has backfired and damaged his profitable streak.

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As the web shutdown that marked the elections was lifted within the wake of the coup, movies surfaced of younger males celebrating on the streets of Libreville. Residents describe a way of reduction and jubilation - liberation from the Bongo cycle of dominance.

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"People feel free from years of living with the Bongos, during COVID and through economic collapse. You can really see how the rich have been getting richer and the poor getting poorer," says one Libreville resident who has chosen to remain nameless for her security.

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"Even if you go around Libreville, there are so many people without electricity and water. People are really fed up with the situation and would try to protest, just to say they need water, and the military would stop them right away," she added.

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Read extra:What is happening in Gabon and who is Ali Bongo?Niger coup shows how pendulum is swinging to Russian-backed autocracy

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That similar navy is now posturing as an equalising power for freedom. A junta headed up by none apart from Bongo's cousin and head of the Gabonese presidency's Republican Guard, Brice Nguema. A person who's going through the identical allegations of corruption and cash laundering as his cousin.

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Many of the coups we're seeing throughout Africa are pushed by inside politics and opportunism - fuelled by energy struggles between civilian elite and navy elite, after which posturing off public dissatisfaction and poverty.

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Whether it's the dynastic coups of the Debys in Chad, the long-time presidential guards in Niger or Omar al-Bashir's henchmen in Sudan - these navy coups can't be mistaken for folks energy. They are nothing greater than a change of clothes.

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