Issue Post  
Business | Entertainment | Health | Politics | Science & Tech || Special coverage: H1N1 / Swine Flu Africa | Americas | Asia | Europe | Middle East | United States

Gabon's Oil Hub Tense After Disputed Vote

Saturday, September 5 2009
Oil Well
Oil Well (file photo)

Security forces in Gabon continued to clash with opposition demonstrators following the announcement that the son of the country's long-time ruler has been elected president. The French oil firm Total has evacuated foreign workers from Port Gentil, at the center of the violence.

Interior Minister Jean-Francois Ndongou told French state radio that two people killed overnight in Port Gentil were looters shot by a home owner.

Rioters in Port Gentil burned the French consulate and looted nearby shops Thursday following the announcement that former defense minister Ali Ben Bongo won last Sunday's presidential election.

That violence brought an overnight curfew to Port Gentil which was repeated Friday and will continue, Ndongou says, "as long as necessary if calm does not prevail."

Prisoners in Port Gentil were broken out of jail and demonstrators attacked facilities of the French oil firm Total. Expatriate staff and their families have now been evacuated to the capital, Libreville, where Total says they will remain until it is safe to return to Port Gentil.

The French Foreign Ministry says French nationals elsewhere in Gabon should stay in their homes.

Opposition demonstrators are targeting French concerns because of the long relationship between French leaders and the 42-year-rule of Gabonese President Omar Bongo. His death in June raised expectations of change in Gabon. The election of his son in a vote that opposition candidates says was unfair has renewed allegations that Paris backed Ali Ben Bongo's candidacy.

The French Foreign Ministry says it was not involved in the campaign. It says Sunday's vote took place under "acceptable conditions" and losing candidates who want to contest the result should do so in Gabon's constitutional court.

Opposition leaders do intend to challenge a result that gave Bongo 42 percent of the vote. The electoral commission says former interior minister Andre Mba Obame and opposition leader Pierre Mamboundou each received about 25 percent.

Obame says the results are an "electoral coup." Mamboundou's party is calling on its supports to "resist" the outcome. Politicians allied with Mamboundou say he has gone into hiding after he was injured when police tear-gassed demonstrators following the results.

The African Union is calling on Gabonese to show "great restraint" and abstain from acts that might compromise peace and security.

Latest News
Opposition Leader Says, President Khama Has Weakened Botswana’s..
Nyasa Times Editors Seek Asylum in Britain
Vietnam War Correspondents Gather for Saigon Reunion
Obama Pushes Financial Reform During Midwest Trip
SPLM Needs Bashir for Full CPA Implementation, Says Analyst
Tough State Immigration Law Could Face Federal Lawsuit
VOA Staff Recounts Drama When Saigon Fell 35 Years Ago
Kennedy Condolence Letters Capture Unique Moment in US History
Roadside Bomb Kills 12 Civilians in Afghanistan
US Probe: Controller Missed Pilot Error in Hudson River Midair..
US General Justifies Military Responses To Airline Incidents
Human Rights Watch: Torture 'Routine' at Secret Iraqi Detention..
Debt Crisis Spreads Beyond Greece
Pakistani-born New Yorker Pleads Guilty to Single Terrorism Charge
Experts Call for 'Smart' Fight Against Terrorism

More Stories
Primate lines Put Forest Ecosystems at RiskDec
Israel says 10 to 15 Israelis Held Hostage in Mumbai Attacks
Hearing, Voice Problems Worsen Seniors' Communication Skills
Four Freed Cuban Dissidents to Arrive in Spain
Egypt Arrests 42 Muslims, Christians Following Sectarian Riots
UN: Humanitarian Crisis Unfolding In Yemen
Ukrainians Disillusioned with President Yushchenko
Obama Energy Advisor: Climate Bill Unlikely in 2009
Asian Markets Drop on News of Lehman Brothers Collapse, Merrill Buyout
Nepal's Deposed King Loses Ancestral Home in Gorkha
Russian General: Withdrawal from Georgia to Take 10 Days
South Asia's Journalists Seek Greater Protection from Governments
UN says Reducing Disaster Risks Helps Climate Change Adaptation
Top Two Al-Qaida Leaders in Iraq Killed
Movement to Ban Cluster Bombs Gains Momentum

© 2008-2009 Issue Post News Service