Gabonese
opposition leader Jean Ping greets his supporters outside his party
headquarters in Libreville on August 28, 2016 ©Marco Longari (AFP)
|
Gabon's main opposition
candidate Jean Ping claimed Sunday he had been elected president, prompting
incumbent Ali Bongo to say that he will wait for official results to be
released.
AFP
report continues:
Gabon Presidential Election (AFP)
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The
official tally of votes will not be published until Tuesday and some voters
voiced fears of a repeat of the violence seen after a disputed 2009 election.
"I
have been elected. I am waiting for the outgoing president to call to
congratulate me," said Ping, 73, in the capital Libreville, prompting
jubilation from hundreds of his supporters.
Bongo
responded later by saying that he was waiting for official results to be
released from Saturday's election.
"We
respect the law... so we are waiting calmly for Cenap (the national election
commission) to announce the results of the election," Bongo told a crowd
of supporters in his first public remarks since the poll.
Bongo,
57, has been in power since the 2009 election held after the death of his
father, Omar, who ruled Gabon for 41 years.
Ping,
like the current president, worked for many years in Omar Bongo's
administration.
"You
have foiled the congenital fraud of this regime which we are finally going to
see off," Ping told his supporters Sunday.
Ping
met with France's ambassador to Gabon shortly after he spoke, his team said.
They
also claimed that he had beaten Bongo 60-to-40 in the 60 percent of ballots
that had been counted. It was impossible to immediately verify the claim.
Both
frontrunners had already predicted victory and accused the other of cheating.
Shortly
after polling ended on Saturday, the president's spokesman said: "Bongo
will win... we are already on our way to a second mandate."
Bongo's
camp has acknowledged the election is "tight, but we are ahead".
Interior
Minister Pacome Moubelet Boubeya has said official results would be released
around 1600 GMT on Tuesday and stressed it was "illegal to declare results
before the relevant authorities do."
The
head of the Pan-African Democracy Observatory, an NGO based in Togo, played
down the significance of Ping's declaration.
"We
should not be surprised if one or the other declares victory. It's all part of
the game," Djovi Gally told reporters.
-
Coup d'etat? -
Fearing
a repeat of the violence that followed Bongo's victory in 2009 many residents,
who had stocked up on food, stayed indoors.
The
streets of Libreville were deserted with even shops and stalls that are usually
open on Sundays shuttered.
The
embassy of former colonial power France warned its citizens not to travel
within the country unless absolutely necessary for the time being and to keep
themselves informed.
"There
is no trouble in this district for now but we want to get the results
soon," said one citizen, who gave his name as Honore.
"We'll
see how the candidates react. I hope it won't be like last time," he
added.
Back
then, several people were killed in the clashes, buildings were looted and the
French consulate in Port Gentil, which saw the worst of the violence, was
torched.
Ping's
campaign coordinator, Jean Gaspard Ntoutoume Ayi, claimed that Bongo would
attempt to retain power by force.
"Ali
Bongo has decided to ignore the election and to stay in power," said Ayi.
"This
is the situation which we are entering: the election is over, the coup d'etat
has started."
Bongo's
camp has dismissed such claims as "totally crazy."
-
Powder keg -
Emmanuel
Edzang, a voter in Libreville, said the capital had the feeling of a
"powder keg."
Until
shortly before polling day, Bongo was the clear favourite, with the opposition
split by several prominent politicians vying for the top job.
But
earlier this month, the main challengers pulled out and said they would all
back Ping.
Both
candidates have promised to break with the past.
Faced
with repeated charges of nepotism, Bongo has long insisted he owes his
presidency to merit and years of government service.
His
extravagant campaign made much of the slogan "Let's change together",
and of roads and hospitals built during his first term.
Ping
described Bongo's attempts to diversify the economy away from oil as window
dressing.
One
third of Gabon's population lives in poverty, despite the country boasting one
of Africa's highest per capita incomes at US$8,300 (€7,400 euros) thanks to
pumping 200,000 barrels of oil a day.
There has been growing popular unrest in recent months, with numerous public sector strikes and thousands of layoffs in the oil sector.
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