Tag: Gabon

  • Morocco 2025: Diallo & Co brace up for Gabon clash

    Morocco 2025: Diallo & Co brace up for Gabon clash

    Cote d’Ivoire and Gabon will compete in their final Group F assignment at the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations this week, with the game set to commence at Stade de Marrakech tonight.

    As it stands, Cote d’Ivoire  occupy top spot in Group F following their 1-1 draw with Cameroon during matchday two.

    Cote d’Ivoire and Cameroon share an identical record of four points after two matches played, while a win against Gabon would secure their ticket into the next phase of the showpiece.

    Gabon on the other hand, have already been eliminated from the AFCON following their 3-2 defeat against Mozambique at Stade Adrar on Sunday. The Panthers are fourth in Group F, with two losses from their opening set of fixtures.

    The Elephants are in the running to claim their fourth AFCON title, while they remain one of the favourites this year as the reigning kings of African football.

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    Reflecting on Cote d’Ivoire’s campaign following their draw with Cameroon, the Elephants coach Emerse Faé believes that his side needs to be more efficient in seeing out games.

    “It’s for matches like these that we love the CAN—a hard-fought contest. Both teams brought intensity, created chances, and no one shut the game down,” Faé said.

    “A fair draw against a compact Cameroon side that challenged us tactically. I’m satisfied with the performance, with the result. My only regret from this match: we lacked a bit of guile after our goal.

    “Instead of going after them, we should have slowed the tempo, let the clock run down, forced Cameroon to open up and expose space, and then taken advantage. We conceded their goal too soon.”

  • Shettima, African leaders attend inauguration of Gabon’s President

    Shettima, African leaders attend inauguration of Gabon’s President

    Vice President Kashim Shettima joined a host of African leaders on Saturday to witness the inauguration of President Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema of Gabon.

    The historic swearing-in ceremony, which took place at the Stade de l’Amitié sino-gabonaise in the capital city of Libreville, marked the formal commencement of Nguema’s term as Gabon’s democratically elected president. 

    Details from the swearing-in proceedings were contained in a statement by Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Communications, Office of the Vice President, Stanley Nkwocha.

    He clinched victory in the April 12 presidential polls, triumphing over seven other candidates in a contest that signaled the nation’s return to democratic rule.

    President Nguema, who had served as interim leader for the past twenty months following the ouster of longtime President Ali Bongo, was greeted by a jubilant crowd and an array of dignitaries as he pledged a renewed era of governance, youth empowerment, and national development.

    In his inaugural address, President Nguema thanked the people of Gabon for their overwhelming support and promised to work tirelessly for the country’s progress. 

    He emphasised his administration’s commitment to tackling pressing national issues, including insecurity, crime, and inadequate access to clean water.

    “I am committed to leading a government that listens to its people, prioritizes security, and ensures that every Gabonese citizen can access the resources they need to thrive,” Nguema declared.

    He also underscored the importance of regional cooperation, urging peaceful coexistence among African nations and reaffirming his intent to collaborate closely with the United Nations in the interest of global peace and development.

    Representing President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Vice President Shettima led Nigeria’s delegation to the event, accompanied by Hon. Usman Bello Kumo, Chairman of the House Committee on Police Affairs, and Dr. Aliyu Modibbo, Special Adviser to the President on General Duties in the Office of the Vice President.

    The Nigerian delegation’s presence underscored the country’s ongoing commitment to supporting stable democratic transitions across Africa.

    The inauguration ceremony was a vibrant spectacle, featuring military parades, traditional music and dance, and displays of Gabon’s diverse cultural heritage. 

    Read Also: Shettima to represent Nigeria at Gabon President-elect’s inauguration

    The colorful celebration symbolized a hopeful new chapter for the Central African nation.

    Alongside Vice President Shettima, more than a dozen African heads of state and former leaders attended the ceremony, including President Teodoro Obiang Nguema of Equatorial Guinea, President Paul Kagame of Rwanda, former Ghanaian President, John Dramani Mahama, and President Julius Maada Bio of Sierra Leone.

    Other dignitaries included Presidents Félix Tshisekedi of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Bassirou Diomaye Faye of Senegal, Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno of Chad, Denis Sassou Nguesso of the Republic of Congo, Ismaïl Omar Guelleh of Djibouti, Umaro Sissoco Embaló of Guinea-Bissau, and Évariste Ndayishimiye of Burundi, among others.

    Following the ceremony, Vice President Shettima and his delegation returned to Abuja, having fulfilled a diplomatic mission that reinforced Nigeria’s standing as a steadfast ally in the promotion of democratic governance on the African continent.

  • Shettima to represent Nigeria at Gabon President-elect’s inauguration

    Shettima to represent Nigeria at Gabon President-elect’s inauguration

    Vice President Kashim Shettima will today depart Abuja for Libreville, Gabon, where he will represent President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Nigeria at the inauguration of Gabon’s President-elect, Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema.

    Oligui Nguema, who has served as Gabon’s transitional leader since August 2023 following a military-led ouster of former President Ali Bongo Ondimba, emerged victorious in the country’s April 12 presidential election. 

    According to official results announced by Gabon’s Constitutional Court, Nguema secured a sweeping 94.85% of the votes—amounting to 58,074 ballots.

    He defeated seven other contenders in the race, including former Prime Minister, Alain Claude Bilie-By-Nze, who came in a distant second with just 3% of the vote. 

    No other candidate managed to cross the 1% mark, according to the court’s final tally.

    Nguema’s overwhelming victory paves the way for a full return to constitutional civilian rule in the oil-rich Central African nation, which has been under transitional governance for the past eight months.

    According to a statement on Saturday morning by Stanley Nkwocha, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Communications, Office of the Vice President, the Nigerian government reaffirmed its support for Gabon’s ongoing democratic journey and highlighted the strategic importance of stable governance in the region.

    “Nigeria remains supportive of the peaceful democratic transition in Gabon and reaffirms the government’s broader strategic interest in promoting democratic governance and regional stability in Central Africa,” the statement reads.

    Shettima is expected to join other regional and international leaders at the inauguration ceremony, after which he will return to Nigeria.

    Tinubu’s administration has made the promotion of democracy and good governance in Africa a central theme of its foreign policy, consistently advocating for constitutional rule and peaceful transitions across the continent.

  • Afrijet-Fly Gabon appoints Noutchemo as Country Director

    Afrijet-Fly Gabon appoints Noutchemo as Country Director

    Afrijet-FlyGabon, has appointed Fadimatou Noutchemo Simo as the new Country Director for Cameroon and Nigeria as part of its commitment to expanding its footprint in Africa.

    With extensive experience in aviation management and international relations, Ms. Noutchemo Simo will oversee the airline’s operations, growth, and strategic partnerships in these key markets.

    The prominent airline recognised for its regional connections across Central and West Africa, has officially launched a new flight route connecting Douala, Cameroon, to Port Harcourt, Nigeria.

    This new route, set to begin operations this month, will provide a direct air link between these two bustling cities, enhancing business and leisure travel opportunities in the region.

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    In preparation for the new route, the Country Manager of Afrijet-FlyGabon and Ms. Noutchemo Simo visited the Consuls General of Nigeria in Douala and Buea earlier this month.

    The purpose of the visits was to inform the consuls about the launch of the new route and to seek their support for strengthening bilateral ties and regional connectivity.

    These engagements highlight Afrijet-FlyGabon’s dedication to fostering diplomatic relations and collaborations across the Central and West African regions.  

  • Gabon votes on new constitution

    Gabon votes on new constitution

    Gabon held a referendum on a new constitution at the weekend, a major step towards establishing democratic rule after a coup ousted the Bongo dynasty last year.

    But some observers fear that the ruling junta may use the process to remain in power.

    The proposed new constitution introduces two-term limits on the presidency, each lasting seven years, removes the position of prime minister and recognises French as Gabon’s working language.

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    General Brice Oligui Nguema, the interim president who seized power in a coup last year, has said that the vote reflects the government’s commitment towards the transition, and urged voters to participate.

    He praised the transparency of the process.

    “This is something that I note, and it’s positive. A huge step for the transition,” he said after casting his vote in the capital.

    Posters in Libreville have been plastered in the capital in the run-up, with the majority urging voters to pass the proposed legislation. On Saturday, voting stations were quiet in the morning, but activity picked up as the day wore on.

  • ‘Make some noise’ on Gabon

    ‘Make some noise’ on Gabon

    Following his ouster and detention under house arrest late in August by junta actors, deposed President Ali Bongo Ondimba of Gabon was shown in a viral video calling on the international community to ‘make some noise.’ The message obviously was that sabre rattling could pressure the soldiers into chickening out, or at the minimum release Bongo and his family members from detention. Bongo’s wife, Sylvia Bongo Ondimba Valentin, and eldest son, Noureddin Bongo Valentin, are among principal figures of the Bongo era held by the coup makers. His call came against the backdrop of pressure plied at the time by the international community on putschists in Niger Republic who sacked President Mohamed Bazoum from power on 26th July.

    Bongo’s call, however, did not get the traction he apparently wished with the global community. The junta has been consolidating its hold on power and it lately jailed his wife for allegedly embezzling public funds. Sylvia, who has been under house arrest in Libreville, the Gabonese capital, since the 30th August coup that ousted her husband, was charged on 28th September with money laundering, forgery and falsification of records, and jailed 11th October. Her lawyer, Francois Zimeray, described the trial as arbitrary and illegal. He was reported by frontline news agency, AFP,  saying: “We condemned this illegal procedure, There is a difference between justice and arbitrary actions, between the law and revenge.”

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    Noureddin, who is Sylvia and Bongo’s eldest son, has himself been charged alongside several former cabinet members with corruption and embezzling public funds. The coup makers accuse the wife and son of manipulating the former president, who has not fully recovered from a debilitating stroke he suffered in 2018. Ali Bongo, 64, had ruled the central African country since 2009 before he was overthrown by soldiers shortly after being declared winner in a presidential election that the soldiers argued was rigged. His ouster pulled the curtains on nearly 56-year-long rule by the Bongo dynasty, because Ali Bongo became president in succession to his father, Omar, who died in 2009 after some 42 years in power. Gabon is Africa’s third-richest nation in terms of per-capita GDP, but one in three people lives below the poverty line according to the World Bank.

    Many Gabonese saw the soldiers’ intervention as more an act of liberation than a military coup, and that is perhaps why the junta is consolidating. But a junta is a junta and can’t be a legitimate substitute for civilian rule – even a bad one. Besides, Sylvia’s fate could signpost that of others being currently held, especially Noureddin who is also accused of treason. So, it may be time to really ‘make some noise.’

  • Gabon: Moment of truth

    Gabon: Moment of truth

    There’s always a general tendency which is often ignored at the peril of governments; and that’s the fact that bad governance brings exposure. Of course, this exposure comes in all ramifications. When people get dissatisfied at home, they look abroad for succor. Human beings are like that. What has helped the Francophone countries to remain silent for too long is the principle of assimilation – to be brainwashed like robots; unlike other colonizers who allowed people to be themselves. That’s why countries like Nigeria and Ghana experienced coups decades ago because, from the British culture, they saw bad governance and reacted.

    The principle of assimilation for which the French are renowned is a very dangerous tendency; it’s nothing but slavery. What’s therefore happening is that countries that are now revolting, sort of, are just waking up. So, let not President Bola Tinubu fret over copycat coups. Yes, there will be; even more! But it’s not as if democracy is dying in Africa. No! In the first place, democracy was not born in Africa. It was only an adopted child. It was imposed on us. So, it is not likely to die here. Thank God democracy is working in Nigeria and Tinubu is our president. He need not be afraid; only that the right thing must be done to the extent that it’s the citizens who will rise in opposition to anything that’s adversative to democracy in Nigeria.

    Karl Marx once said: “woe betide the slave owner who feeds and gives his slaves freedom because it is at his own peril.” Well, Marx was only asking the colonizers to sustain the pressure so that the colonized would not possess the capacity to think. That’s what the Gabonese were subjected to. After all, when a man stays in darkness for too long, he begins to think that darkness is the norm. Birds that were born in a cage would always think that flying amounted to illness. If people look for water and they can’t find it, the possibility of drinking sand cannot be ruled out. Also, one who is caught in a desert is bound to do ugly and unimaginable things when thirst and hunger bite! So, it’s unlikely that an ordinary Gabonese would think that life would continue that way. That many of their children and wards have succeeded in traveling out of the country ought to have treated society to a story of slow movement in social circles; that it grows unhurriedly. Come, to think of it, people were losing their jobs. They were losing their homes and human dignity, yet the careless rulers who had amassed all the wealth in the country to themselves and their cronies thought that everybody would keep quiet.

    In reality, once a man is exposed, the man in him will start working, for no one can fool all the people all the time! It took Major Kaduna Nzeogwu’s exposure to Sandhurst to be bold enough to say, ‘enough is enough’. So, when he got back, it wasn’t too much effort for him to organize a putsch. And there was a coup! The pattern is the same everywhere. Ghana got the same exposure and the country experienced a coup d’état. In March 1998, some oil-rich Niger Delta youths travelled to Abuja, courtesy of the ‘Two-Million-Man March’. They beheld the wonders of the Federal Capital Territory and took the ‘good news’ back home. Nigeria is yet to recover from the aftereffects of that experience.

    The experience in Gabon can be likened to the fate of dynasties; they will all die. Surely certainly, Gabon will happen to any country that is careless, callous, irresponsible and non-responsive to the yearnings of the people. The Monarchy in England survives till today because the chicken that was sold at £1 twenty years ago is still £1. So, it is safe to say: ‘Hail the King!’ But why will I say ‘Hail the King’ when I am hungry? What’s there in the king to hail when my house is not stable, when my major preoccupation is how to pay the school fees of my kids and how to feed them and their mother; even pay rent? Why will it even enter the flow of any reasonable man in a society where citizens are hungry and in need; in a society where one’s family is not safe? The more reason arrogant and sit-tight rulers need to read the fig leaf from Gabon before it is too late.

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    The late MKO Abiola was reputed for a spectacular achievement before he went away. Once he slept with a woman and she’s lucky to have been impregnated by him, the baby was taken care of at birth, to overcome certain initial obstacles of life. It’s not because MKO was demonstrating money. No! It’s simply because the man knew that once one was able to overcome these obstacles – which would always come – the rest was paradise! Good life, good health, good accommodation and quality education for the children: what else does one want? That was Abiola’s focus at the time. He knew the disadvantages and allied negative implications of poverty. That’s why he was always setting aside certain amounts of money as the cost of his indiscretion. MKO did his best to attack them frontally so as to make life meaningful for his children. Till date, it’s doubtful if any of his children has ever been told that their father neglected them when they were born. Certainly, not a single one!  

    Now that Tinubu is our president, it won’t be a bad idea if, once in a while, he descends on Agege in Lagos or visits Ijebu-Jesa in Osun State to remind him of the lot of many Nigerians. If you are taking wine, please bear in mind that some people don’t have water because it is what you know that will determine what you do. Unfortunately, the retinue of aides won’t tell you that truth; that unmet expectations are recipes for unintended consequences. Yes, they may be unintended but they are surely there! For example, why will a grown-ass man continue to sing a song that will not add any value to him? It is that principle that cuts across age, tribe, region, religion and the like. Poverty affects everybody, but it is worse with some people. In other words, there is inequality in poverty; and it is consistent. That’s where leadership must fare! Leadership is an ongoing phenomenon in which one must keep shooting right, not that ‘I shot once yesterday and it was correct’. How about today? In a word, leadership must be concerned about the barometer of the living conditions in society. It must be able to devise tactical strategies that meet the people’s expectations, if the government’s response is to have meaning or impact at all.

    The ordinary Gabonese saw the putsch as the hand of God which nobody could control. People were hungry and the rulers were giving them grapes. They said the people needed it because it contained vitamin C. They were hungry but those that were saddled with leadership responsibilities were greening the streets, forgetting that the stomachs of those who would walk on those streets must be filled for them to have strength; and that those whose stomachs were ‘ungreened’ would ultimately ‘disgreen’ the streets.

    ‘He who feels it knows it!’ Few years ago, it was the ‘Arab Spring’. Now, it is the ‘Francophone Awake.’ Even North Korea is already seeing the visuals on the screens in her ‘other room’.

    May the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world, grant us peace in Nigeria!

  • Gabon Agoniste

    Gabon Agoniste

    • Bad civilian leadership should not be an excuse for military intervention

    It was the eighth in the West and Central African region within three years and one that came barely a month after another coup the global community – particularly the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) – was yet grappling to reverse. The coup in Gabon last week underscored a latent fear in many quarters about the contagion of military adventurism in power.

    Soldiers in Gabon booted out President Ali Bongo Ondimba just few days after a presidential poll that he was declared to have won by nearly a landslide. Bongo, 64, was returned by the Gabonese electoral board as having polled 64.27 percent of the votes over his main challenger, Albert Ondo Ossa, a university professor, said to have secured 30.77 percent votes. But that election was anything but credible.

    Against global best practice, the Bongo administration did not allow international observers while foreign media outlets were barred from its coverage. Also, internet services were tossed as polling drew to a close penultimate Saturday, and a nighttime curfew imposed. The government had rationalised the web blackout as aimed at preventing the spread of “fake news,” and the curfew to preserve public safety. But the opposition argued that the election was altogether a fraud. Ossa, the main challenger, said ballot papers in many areas left out his name, while the opposition coalition noted that names of contenders who had withdrawn from the race remained on the ballot, apparently to confuse voters.

    Bongo’s purported election win was for a third term after he had been 14 years in power, in a dynastic rule by which his family held sway for more than 55 of 63 years of the country’s nationhood since its1960 independence from France. His father, Omar Bongo, ruled despotically for 42 years from 1967 until his death in 2009, upon which the son assumed the reins and had ruled until his ouster. In those years in control, the family reportedly amassed a fortune reckoned to compare with the entire country’s net worth. Gabon moved from being a frontal dictatorship under Omar Bongo towards a semblance of democracy under Ali Bongo. The shift was largely tokenistic as dynastic rule remained in place.

    Read Also: Gabon coup: Ousted President Bongo appeals for help as Commonwealth expresses concern

    Meanwhile, the hegemony suffocated the Gabonese people. The country is one of Africa’s major oil producers, putting out some 200,000 barrels per day, and it harbours what was said to be the world’s largest manganese mines. Both the oil and manganese resources were explored mainly by French corporations. Critics said the Bongo family failed to channel Gabon’s oil and other mineral wealth to national development, leaving nearly 90 percent of the land area covered by forests and about a third of the population in poverty. Analysts also argued that the coup wasn’t just a kick against unprofitable family hegemony, but also against France paternalism that held the economy in barren thrall.

    When soldiers struck on Wednesday, last week, they touted “severe institutional, political, economic and social crisis” that they claimed Gabon was going through as motivation and voided the election of few days earlier. They placed Ali Bongo under house arrest while his son and close adviser, Noureddin Bongo Valentin, along with four others were arrested on charges of treason, embezzlement and falsifying the president’s signature among other charges. Some 24 hours later, they named a “transitional president” in the person of ex-head of the Republican Guard, General Brice Oligui Nguema, who took purported oath of office last Monday.

    The Gabon coup followed the one in Niger Republic on July 26th, which ECOWAS has insisted must be reversed and President Mohamed Bazoum restored to power. Before the Niger coup, there were two coups in Burkina Faso in 2022, two coups in Mali – one in 2020 and another in 2021, and a coup in Guinea in 2021. In Chad, there was a constitutional coup upon the death of President Idriss Déby Itno in April 2021 when his son, General Mahamat Idriss Déby, was named to succeed him contrary to the provision of the country’s laws for parliament Speaker to take over.

    But military intervention in power is totally unacceptable under any circumstance – even in the event of bad civilian governance – because two wrongs only make another wrong. For one, military interventionists have never offered a better alternative to bad civilian leadership; in all cases, they’ve fared worse than the civilians displaced. The Gabonese opposition who hailed the coup have begun to lament since its hopes to take over the reins of power have fizzled out with its euphoria. Besides, whereas opposition can thrive under civil rule and there is always the hope of another polling opportunity to change a bad government, such prospects are non-existent under military juntas. The global community must, thus, rise to beat back the Gabon coup-makers by all available means, even so to dissuade emulation by power adventurers in other African countries.

    There is, however, also need for democratic introspection, for more effective peer review by the African power elite to check erring members with sit-tight mania like Paul Biya in Cameroun and Museveni in Uganda. Within reasonable limits of sovereignty and non-interference, the African Union (AU) should lead sub-regional blocs in pressuring bad leaders to institute democratic systems. Civilian populations across the continent need also be empowered to reject their bad leaders at the polls. In other words, if forcible change is undesirable, peaceful change must thrive.

  • Nigeria expresses worry over Gabon junta’s silence on handover date

    Nigeria expresses worry over Gabon junta’s silence on handover date

    The Federal Government has called on Gabon’s junta to immediately restore democratic rule in the Central African country.

    The call was contained in a  statement by the spokesperson for the  Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Francisca   Omayuli.

    The ministry warned that the inauguration of Gen. Brice   Nguema as chairman of Gabon’s   Ruling Committee for the Transition and Restoration of Institutions (CTRI)  without a timeline for handover to a civilian government could worsen the “growing discontent” among the country’s political class. 

    The statement reads: “The Federal Government of Nigeria has observed with concern the unfolding political developments in the Republic of Gabon, following the coup d’etat that ousted the administration of President Ali Bongo Ondimba on   August 30, 2023.

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    “The inauguration of the Commandant In-Chief of the Gabonese Republican Guard, Gen. Brice Olingui Nguema as Chairman of the Ruling Committee for the Transition and Restoration of Institutions (CTRI) on Monday, 4th September 2023, with no indication of a transition programme in place, only serves to fan the embers of growing discontent among the political class in the country

    “Nigeria, therefore, joins the larger international community to call for the immediate return to democratic constitutional order, which will go a long way to pacify dissident voices and restore trust and confidence to the electorate. Coup d’etat only serves to compound rather than address any perceived problems.

    “The coup d’etat in Gabon is, therefore, one coup too many in Africa and it is unacceptable at a time when Africa is aspiring to consolidate on democracy and democratic principles for the attainment of  United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    “The Federal Government of Nigeria is committed to partnering with other democratically-elected governments in Africa to sanction perpetrators of unconstitutional change of government in line with the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance (ADC) until democracy is given the chance to thrive in every African country for the good of its peoples.”

  • 14 things to know about Nguema interim President of Gabon

    14 things to know about Nguema interim President of Gabon

    Gen. Brice Nguema, the leader of the military junta which ousted Gabon’s President Ali Bongo has been sworn in as the country’s caretaker president, five days after seizing power in a coup in the Central African country.

    The inauguration ceremony took place on Monday, September 4, at Gabon’s presidential palace in the capital Libreville, which was surrounded by cheering crowds.

    Here are things to know about the new interim President of Gabon:

    1. Nguema was known to be very close to the Bongo family and its inner circle.

    2. He is a distant cousin of Ali Bongo, the deposed president of Gabon.

    3. He was born into a military family, and Nguema trained in Morocco.

    4. After a brilliant career, he served Ali Bongo’s father, Omar Bongo as an aide-de-camp, from 1967 to 2009.

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    5. It was alleged that Nguema’s career began to slow after Ali Bongo came to power, as he was sent abroad to work at Gabon’s Embassies in Morocco and then Senegal as a military attaché.

    6. After Ali Bongo came to power, Nguema was accused of having taken part in an attempted coup fomented by another General in 2009.

    7. A trial was held in Libreville.

    8. Nguema’s involvement was not established, but he was removed from his post and sent to the Gabonese Embassy in Senegal as a military attaché.

    9. He was allegedly unhappy to have been sent abroad.

    10. Ten years later when Ali Bongo had a stroke, Nguema was called back to serve in the presidential guard as the head of intelligence.

    11. He had become a colonel in the meantime, and later general.

    12. In 2020, Nguema was accused by the Organised Crime and corruption reporting project of a conflict of interest.

    13. The organisation said he owned property worth more than a million dollars in the United States that had largely been paid for by cash.

    14. Despite the revelations, Nguema remained as head of the presidential guard and of Bongo’s personal security.