Overview
Country, central Africa.
Area: 103,347 sq mi (267,667 sq km). Population (2008 est.):
1,486,000. Capital: Libreville. Gabon has more than 40 ethnic groups:
the Fang, more than one-fourth of the total population, live north of
the Ogooué River; the largest groups south of the river are the Sira
(including the Punu) and Nzebi. Languages: French (official), several
Bantu languages (notably Fang). Religions: Christianity (mostly Roman
Catholic; also Protestant, other Christians); also Islam, traditional
beliefs. Currency: CFA franc. Gabon straddles the Equator on the western
coast of Africa. It has a narrow coastal plain and becomes hilly in the
south and north. The basin of its chief river, the Ogooué, covers most
of the country; about three-fourths is equatorial rainforest, which
supports numerous plant and animal species. Gabon has reserves of
manganese that are among the largest in the world; it also has huge
deposits of petroleum and natural gas. Gabon has a developing mixed
economy based largely on the exploitation of these mineral and timber
resources. Its chief of state is the president, and the head of
government is the prime minister; the parliament consists of two houses.
Artifacts dating from late Paleolithic and early Neolithic times have
been found in Gabon, but it is not known when the Bantu speakers who
established Gabon’s ethnic composition arrived. Pygmies were probably
the original inhabitants. The Portuguese began arriving in the late 15th
century and were followed by French, Dutch, and English traders. The
Fang started migrating there in the late 18th century. The slave trade
dominated commerce in the 18th and much of the 19th century. The French
then took control, and Gabon was administered (1843–86) with French West
Africa. In 1886 the colony of French Congo was established to include
both Gabon and the Congo; in 1910 Gabon became a separate colony within
French Equatorial Africa. An overseas territory of France from 1946, it
became an autonomous republic within the French Community in 1958 and
declared its independence in 1960. Rule by a sole political party was
established in the 1960s, but discontent with it led to riots in
Libreville in 1989. Legalization of opposition parties enabled new
elections in 1990. The country continued to face economic difficulties
despite large revenues from petroleum exports.
Profile
Official name République Gabonaise (Gabonese Republic)
Form of government unitary multiparty republic with a Parliament
comprising two legislative houses (Senate [102]; National Assembly
[120])
Chief of state President
Head of government Prime Minister
Capital Libreville
Official language French
Official religion none
Monetary unit CFA franc (CFAF)
Population estimate (2008) 1,486,000
Total area (sq mi) 103,347
Total area (sq km) 267,667
Main
country lying on the west coast of Africa, astride the Equator. A
former French colony, Gabon retains strong ties to France and to the
French language and culture. The capital is Libreville.
Land
Gabon is bordered by Equatorial Guinea and Cameroon to the north,
the Republic of the Congo to the east and south, and the Atlantic Ocean
to the west; the islands of São Tomé and Príncipe are situated off the
coast.
Relief and drainage
The narrow coastal plain—often no more than 20 miles (32 km) wide in
the south—is formed of sandstone and alluvium; northward it broadens to
a width of 100 miles (160 km), with outcrops of chalk, limestone, and
Cretaceous sandstone. The Atlantic’s northward-flowing Benguela Current
softens Gabon’s southern coastline by creating sandbars but loses its
effectiveness north of the country’s most westerly point, Cape Lopez,
where the contour of the coast becomes more jagged. Inland, the relief
is characterized by a series of granite plateaus, extending generally
northwest to southeast and rising to elevations of 1,000 to 2,000 feet
(300 to 600 metres). Farther to the west and north the Cristal Mountains
have been dissected by the river system from the western plateau
escarpment into a distinct upland area, and to the south the Ogooué
River drains through a sandstone saddleback before descending to the
lowlands through the granite formations of the Lambaréné region. Granite
also forms Gabon’s central watershed, the Chaillu Massif south of the
Ogooué, which rises to more than 3,300 feet (1,000 metres) and is topped
by the 3,346-foot (1,020-metre) Mount Milondo. Gabon’s highest point,
Mount Bengoué (3,510 feet [1,070 metres]), is in the northeastern part
of the country.
Soils and climate
Gabon has an equatorial climate, with year-round high temperatures
and humidity. Rainfall varies from an annual average of 120 inches
(3,050 mm) at Libreville to 150 inches (3,810 mm) on the northwest
coast, with almost all of it falling between October and May. In the
period from June to September there is little or no rainfall, but
humidity remains high. Temperature shows little seasonal variation, the
daily average being in the low 80s F (upper 20s C).
Plant and animal life
About three-fourths of the country is covered by a dense equatorial
rainforest containing more than 3,000 species of vegetation, including
the okoumé, a hardwood tree that forms the backbone of Gabon’s timber
industry. The rainforest is inhabited by antelope, monkeys, gorillas,
numerous tropical birds, and several varieties of elephants. Gabon has
several national parks, including Lopé National Park (originally
Lopé-Okanda Wildlife Reserve, founded in 1946) in the centre of the
country. The park and related archaeological sites—referred to as the
Ecosystem and Relict Cultural Landscape of Lopé-Okanda—were collectively
designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2007.
Jan S.F. van Hoogstraten
David E. Gardinier
People
Ethnic groups and languages
Except for a few thousand Pygmies, Gabon’s 40 or so peoples speak
Bantu languages that are classified into 10 linguistic groups. The Myene
group (including the Mpongwe and Orungu), though only a relatively small
part of the population today, has played an important role in the
history of the country as a result of its location along the northern
coasts. The Fang, also found in southern Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea,
account for more than one-fourth of the population and live north of the
Ogooué River. The largest groups south of the Ogooué are the Sira
(including the Punu), the Nzebi, and the Mbete, who together form about
one-third of the population. Less-numerous peoples include the Benga and
Seke in the far northwest, the Kota and Teke in the east, and the Vili
along the far southern coast.
Many of the Bantu languages do not have written forms. During the
19th century, Christian missionaries transliterated several of them into
the Latin alphabet and prepared Bible translations and catechisms for
their followers. But the French policy of limiting the use of indigenous
languages solely to religious instruction inhibited the growth of other
types of literature. Because of the extensive efforts to teach French,
nearly all adult Gabonese can speak the language, and almost
three-fourths can read it.
Religion
A large majority of Gabon’s population is Christian, of which Roman
Catholics account for more than two-fifths; Protestants account for more
than one-fourth. Though Gabonese serve as Catholic bishops, they rely
heavily on foreign clergy, particularly the French Holy Ghost Fathers.
The largest Protestant body, the Evangelical Church of Gabon, has
Gabonese pastors in its parishes throughout the north. Other Christian
churches include the Christian Alliance church, generally found in the
southwest and in coastal cities, and the Evangelical Pentecostal church
(Assembly of God) and Adventist church, both found in the estuary and
far northern regions. Of the remainder of the country’s population,
about one-eighth are Muslim, many of them immigrants from other African
countries. Adherents of traditional religions account for about
one-tenth of the population, but that figure does not include Christians
and Muslims who also follow some traditional beliefs and practices. A
syncretic religion called Bwiti (based on an earlier secret society of
the same name) came into existence in the early 20th century and later
played a role in promoting solidarity among the Fang.
David E. Gardinier
Settlement patterns
About four-fifths of Gabon’s population is urban, with about half
the people living in its largest city, Libreville. Other major cities
include Port-Gentil, Franceville, Oyem, and Moanda. The remainder of the
population is scattered widely among several hundred rural villages,
which are concentrated along the rivers and roads; a village often will
have no more than a few families. Port-Gentil is the centre of the
country’s wood and petroleum industries, and Libreville is the
administrative capital and commercial centre.
Demographic trends
Gabon, like its central African neighbours, has a low population
density. Since 1970, as a result of increased urbanization, the low rate
of natural increase of the previous half century gave way to a
relatively high growth rate; by the early 21st century, it was more than
twice the world average. The extent to which the heavy immigration of
foreign workers and refugees has contributed to this growth is unclear.
The population is relatively young—almost three-quarters are below age
30. Life expectancy is more than 50 years of age and is about average
for the continent.
Economy
Gabon’s economy has more links with European and American markets
than with those in neighbouring states (with the exception of Cameroon)
or elsewhere in Africa. The economy shares some characteristics with
those of other sub-Saharan African states: strong links with the former
colonial ruler, a large degree of foreign investment and control,
dependence on foreign technicians, and the decline of agriculture. Gabon
differs from these states in its reliance on thousands of wage earners
from other African countries to supplement its own sparse supply of
workers in retailing, artisanship, and domestic transport.
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
Although agriculture (mainly subsistence farming) occupies about
one-third of the workforce, it plays a small part in the economy of the
country as a whole. Moreover, its appeal as a way of life has declined.
Better educational and employment opportunities in the towns and cities
have emptied the countryside of young people. Despite government efforts
during the 1970s to promote development that would stem the rural exodus
and raise foodstuffs for urban markets, by 1980 Gabon was producing only
enough food to satisfy 10 to 15 percent of its needs. During the 1980s
the government turned to expensive capital-intensive projects for market
gardening to supply Libreville and Franceville. Efforts to revive cocoa
and coffee production brought only modest results, but new projects for
sugar refining at Franceville and palm-oil processing at Lambaréné have
been successful. The prevalence of the tsetse fly defeated attempts to
raise beef and dairy cattle until 1980, when tsetse-resistant cattle
arrived from other parts of Africa. Sheep, goats, and pigs are also
raised; chicken raising exists on a smaller scale. Commercial fishing,
though it has considerable potential, is little developed.
For many years Gabon’s forests, covering more than three-fourths of
its territory, were the country’s principal natural resource, but, by
the early 1970s, newly discovered and exploited mineral wealth surpassed
timber and other forest products in significance. The principal forest
districts have been at Kango, Booué, Fougamou, Ndjolé, Mitzic, and
Mouila, while the forest resources near the coast and along the rivers
have been largely depleted. Exploitation of interior areas began in the
late 1970s, following the construction of the first section of the
Transgabon (Transgabonais) Railroad.
Resources and power
Gabon is one of the world’s largest producers of manganese.
Expansion of production at Moanda has been possible since the completion
of the railroad to nearby Franceville in December 1986 and the
completion of improved ore-handling facilities at the rail terminus at
the deepwater port of Owendo in 1988. The exploitation and processing of
uranium 16 miles (26 km) north of Moanda began in 1961. Diamonds and
gold are also mined in the country, and there are reserves of
high-quality iron ore (60–65 percent iron content) in the northeast at
Mékambo and Bélinga.
Since the late 1960s, revenues from petroleum have brought the
government of Gabon unprecedented income, which it has used to construct
infrastructure and to fund the expansion of education and health
services; widespread corruption among government officials, however, has
limited the impact of this windfall. National budgets multiplied 15
times between the late 1960s and late ’70s, when petroleum came to
represent 70 percent of the country’s exports. Despite fluctuating
prices and resultant drops in production, revenues from petroleum still
provide the majority of national budgets. Nearly half of production is
from offshore fields, which are most productive near Port-Gentil. The
major onshore production sites are at Sette Cama and Rabi-Kounga. Gabon
exports a major proportion of its petroleum production outside Africa,
with the bulk of the crude oil going to the United States and France.
Natural gas from the fields at Port-Gentil is used largely to generate
electricity, but hydropower supplies a greater amount of the country’s
electricity. Important sources of hydroelectric power include the
Tchimbélé, Kinguélé, and Poubara complexes.
Manufacturing
Light industry expanded and diversified after the opening in 1967 of
a petroleum refinery at Port-Gentil. The refinery and its support
operations (a shipyard and metalworking facilities) overshadow other
manufacturing enterprises, which include lumber processing centres,
cement and cigarette factories, a sugar refinery, breweries, palm oil
and flour mills, and light electronics and textile-printing factories. A
number of these enterprises were among the many state corporations (some
of which allowed private investors to hold shares) created by the
government to give Gabon control of its industrial and commercial
sectors. Most of these businesses proved a drain on the treasury,
because the practice of employing relatives and supporters of
politicians often led to mismanagement.
Finance and trade
Membership in the French economic community gives Gabon considerable
stability. The CFA (Communauté Financière Africaine) franc, issued by
the Bank of Central African States (Banque des États de l’Afrique
Centrale), is tied to the euro, giving trading partners confidence in
Gabonese currency. The government has also encouraged foreign investors
with its policy of economic liberalism, although there is governmental
direction and planning.
The United States and France are Gabon’s main trading partners. Other
European Union countries, as well as China and Japan, are also important
partners. These same countries provide the bulk of investment funds and
foreign assistance. Gabon and five other countries (Cameroon, Central
African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo, and Equatorial Guinea)
belong to the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa
(Communauté Économique et Monétaire de l’Afrique Centrale).
Transportation
The lack of good transportation facilities has long hindered Gabon’s
development. The Ogooué River is navigable from the Atlantic to Ndjolé,
150 miles (240 km) upstream. The Ogooué and such rivers as the Abanga
and the Nyanga can be used to float logs downstream from the interior.
The main ports are located at Port-Gentil, Owendo, and Mayumba.
The difficulty of building and maintaining all-weather roads led to
an expansion of air transport after World War II. Gabon acquired a
network of airfields served by light planes, as well as international
airports located at Libreville, Port-Gentil, and Franceville. But air
transport could not move such bulk goods as timber and minerals. In the
1970s petroleum revenues were used to construct the Transgabon
(Transgabonais) Railroad to move such products and to prepare for the
time when Gabon’s petroleum reserves would be depleted. With loans and
aid from France, West Germany, and international organizations, work
began in 1974. The first section, from Owendo to Ndjolé, opened in 1979;
the second section, to Booué, in 1983; and the third, to Franceville, at
the end of 1986.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
Under the constitution of February 1961, which was in force for
three decades, the Gabonese republic had an executive branch more
powerful than the legislative and judicial branches. During the 1970s
the constitution was amended to give the Gabonese Democratic Party
(Parti Démocratique Gabonais; PDG), the only legal party after 1968,
roles in the executive and legislative processes. In May 1990, following
a national conference that was called in response to the upheaval of the
previous four months, the constitution was amended to end the
institutional role of the PDG and to restore a multiparty system.
Parliamentary elections were held in September–October 1990, after which
a new National Assembly adopted the constitution of March 1991; the
constitution has since been amended.
Under the constitution the president, who is head of state, serves a
seven-year term. The National Assembly has legislative powers, but the
president has the authority to dissolve the National Assembly and
postpone legislation. The president nominates the prime minister, who as
head of the government selects the members of the Council of Ministers
in consultation with the president. The president also has the power to
remove the prime minister and council members from office. In practice
most of the ministers are drawn from the 120 deputies in the National
Assembly, which confirms the Council of Ministers and may oust the
government through a vote of no confidence after a certain period.
The constitution provided for an upper legislative house (Senate) for
the first time in the history of the republic, and the first elections
to the Senate (indirect by local councils) were held in early 1997. A
constitutional amendment passed by a PDG-dominated Assembly in April
1997 designated that the president of the Senate would succeed the
president of the republic in case of the latter’s death or incapacity.
The position of vice president of the republic was also created by
amendment; the vice president, who cannot succeed the president, is
appointed by and assists the president.
The 1991 constitution also provides strong guarantees for both
individual and public liberties not found in the document of 1961. A
Charter of Parties adopted at the same time as the constitution defines
the role of Gabon’s political parties in a multiparty democracy.
Local government and justice
Administratively, Gabon is divided into nine provinces, which are
further divided into préfectures and sous-préfectures (subprefectures).
Provincial governors, prefects, and subprefects are all appointed by the
president.
The highest courts in Gabon’s judiciary system are the country’s
former Supreme Court chambers: a judicial court, an administrative
court, and a court of accounts, each with absolute authority over its
area of expertise. Courts of appeal are found in Franceville and
Libreville, and smaller tribunal courts exist throughout the country.
There is also a constitutional court, which is the highest court with
regards to constitutional matters. The judicial system includes
customary law courts, presided over by traditional chiefs who mediate
local disputes.
Health and welfare
Health facilities remain inadequate, particularly outside the
Libreville area, despite improvements since the 1970s. The government
provides nearly all health care services. The internationally known
hospital operated by Albert Schweitzer from 1924 to 1965 and now named
after him is located in Lambaréné. Malaria, sleeping sickness,
tuberculosis, and other infectious diseases are widespread problems.
HIV/AIDS is also a growing problem in Gabon, as the prevalence rate has
increased since the early 1990s.
Education
Gabon’s educational system continues to be modeled closely on that
of France. French remains the sole medium of instruction; Bantu
languages are studied as electives at the secondary and higher levels.
Education is officially mandatory from ages 6 to 16. Primary education
lasts for six years, and secondary education consists of a four-year
cycle followed by a three-year cycle. Institutes of higher education
include Omar Bongo University (1970) in Libreville, which has programs
in most fields and some advanced studies; the University of Health
Sciences (2002), also in Libreville; and the University of Science and
Technology of Masuku (1986), located near Franceville. Many Gabonese
study abroad, particularly in France, at the university and graduate
levels.
Almost three-fourths of the adult population is literate, which is
similar to the regional average and slightly lower than the world
average.
Cultural life
The French influence on Gabonese culture is prevalent. Gabon’s
contemporary writers express themselves almost exclusively in French. At
the same time, there has been continued interest in Gabon’s precolonial
history and traditions, and much research continues on the Fang epic
(mvet) and the art of the Mpongwe, Fang, and Kota. In 1983 the
International Centre for Bantu Civilizations was created, with its
headquarters at Libreville. The National Museum of Arts and Traditions
is also in Libreville.
Sports and recreation
Football (soccer) is the national sport in Gabon, though much of the
play is limited to the coast because of the dense rainforest in the
interior. Gabon founded a football federation in 1962, and it became
affiliated with the International Federation of Association Football the
following year. Basketball is also popular in Gabon, and the country is
a member of the International Basketball Federation. A number of
Gabonese participate in boxing, and squash is developing a following,
especially in Libreville. The country’s scenic landscape also attracts
hikers and cyclists.
In 1965 Gabon formed an Olympic committee, which was recognized by
the International Olympic Committee in 1968. Gabonese athletes first
competed at the 1972 Summer Games in Munich.
Media and publishing
Several newspapers and other periodicals are published in French.
The government-owned L’Union is published daily, while most private
publications are published weekly or less frequently. National radio
stations broadcast in French as well as in local languages. Gabon is
also the site of an international radio network, Africa No. 1, that
reaches much of the continent. There are both state-owned and private
television stations in the country. French publications circulate
extensively, and television programs are relayed from France.
Brian Weinstein
David E. Gardinier
History
Early colonization
This discussion focuses on Gabon since the late 15th century. For a
treatment of earlier periods and of the country in its regional context,
see Central Africa.
At the arrival of the first Portuguese navigators to Gabon in 1472,
portions of southern Gabon were loosely linked to the state of Loango,
which in turn formed a province of the vast Kongo kingdom to the south.
From the offshore islands of São Tomé and Príncipe, where the Portuguese
established sugar plantations, they developed trade with the mainland.
From the late 1500s, Dutch, French, Spanish, and English competitors
also exchanged cloth, iron goods, firearms, and alcoholic beverages for
hardwoods, ivory, and a few slaves.
The slave trade achieved extensive development only between the 1760s
and 1840s, as a result of heightened demand from Brazil and Cuba.
Interior peoples sent undesirables from their own societies and captives
from warfare down the waterways to the coast, where they were collected
in barracoons (temporary enclosures) to await the arrival of European
ships. The Orungu clans at Cape Lopez organized a kingdom whose power
rested on control of the slave trade through the mouths of the Ogooué
River. The Mpongwe clans of the estuary, who were already important
traders, also profited from the slave trade, as did the Vili of Loango,
whose activities extended throughout southern Gabon. Only the Fang, who
were migrating southward from Cameroon into the forests north of the
Ogooué, ordinarily refused to hold slaves or engage in warfare to obtain
them. The coastward migrations of the numerous and often warlike Fang
nevertheless contributed to the further decimation and dispersion of
many interior peoples, particularly during the 19th century.
French control
By 1800 the British were becoming the leading traders in
manufactures throughout the Gulf of Guinea. After 1815 the French sought
to compete more actively in the commercial sphere and to join Britain in
combating the slave trade. To these ends, Capt. Édouard Bouët-Willaumez
negotiated treaties with the heads of two Mpongwe clans, King Denis
(Antchouwe Kowe Rapontchombo) on the southern bank of the estuary in
1839 and King Louis (Anguile Dowe) on the northern bank in 1841. They
agreed to end the slave trade and to accept French sovereignty over
their lands. The arrival of American Protestant missionaries on the
northern bank in May 1842 to open a school in the lands of King Glass
(R’Ogouarowe)—the centre of British, American, and German commercial
activity—spurred the French to establish Fort d’Aumale within the
territory of King Louis in 1843. In 1844 France brought in Roman
Catholic missionaries to promote French cultural influence among the
Mpongwe and neighbouring peoples. French agents obtained a treaty from
King Glass, recognizing French sovereignty. In 1849 Bouët-Willaumez
organized a small settlement of mainly Vili freed slaves called
Libreville (“Free Town”), which, combined with the fort, formed the
nucleus of the capital.
During the 1850s and ’60s the French gradually extended their control
along the adjacent coast and sent explorers into the interior. The
expeditions of Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza between 1875 and 1885
established French authority on the upper Ogooué, where Franceville was
founded in 1880, and on the Loango coast. An enlarged Gabon was attached
to the French Congo in 1886 under Brazza as governor.
In 1910 Gabon became one of the four colonies within the federation
of French Equatorial Africa. The French delimited the frontier with the
Germans in Cameroon in 1885 and with the Spanish in Río Muni, or Spanish
Guinea (later Equatorial Guinea), in 1900. French occupation of the
Gabon interior brought little opposition, but interference with trade
and such exactions as head taxes, labour taxes for public projects, and
forced labour provoked considerable resistance, as did the French policy
from 1898 to 1914 of developing the economy through monopolistic
concessionary companies, which devastated settlement, agricultural
production, and trade.
In the period between the two world wars, a pro-French but
anticolonialist elite was created, mainly from the graduates of the
boys’ schools of the Brothers of Saint-Gabriel at Libreville and
Lambaréné. From their ranks came most of the politicians who held office
during the Fourth French Republic (1946–58), when Gabon became an
overseas territory with its own assembly and representation in the
French Parliament. During this era France considerably expanded public
investment in the economy, health care, and education. In 1958 Gabon
became an autonomous republic within the French Community and, after
concluding cooperation agreements with France, achieved independence on
Aug. 17, 1960.
Gabon since independence
Gabon favoured close relations with France and the continued use of
French language and culture. It opposed political ties with the other
states of sub-Saharan Africa, however, because of dissatisfaction with
the previous federation and a desire to develop its natural resources
for its own benefit.
Attempts by the republic’s first president, Léon M’ba, to institute a
single-party regime provoked a rebellion by young military officers in
February 1964. But M’ba, who had strong backing from French economic
interests, was restored to power by French forces sent on orders from
Pres. Charles de Gaulle. The intervention made possible the rise of
Albert-Bernard (later Omar) Bongo to the presidency after M’ba’s death
in 1967 and the establishment of a single-party regime in the following
year, the only party being Bongo’s Gabonese Democratic Party (Parti
Démocratique Gabonais; PDG). Under the single-party regime, Bongo was
elected to the presidency in 1973 and was reelected in 1979. In 1982 a
new opposition group, the Movement for National Renewal (Mouvement de
Redressement National), called for multiparty democracy, exercise of
civil liberties, and an end to governmental corruption, but it was
quickly suppressed; Bongo was again reelected in 1986.
In the mid-1980s, declining petroleum prices caused an economic
downturn. Austerity measures imposed by the government led to
antigovernment demonstrations in Libreville and Port-Gentil in early
1990. This unrest led to the creation in March of a national conference,
which included opposition groups, to discuss political reform. As a
result, constitutional amendments adopted in May restored the multiparty
system. That same month the death of an opposition leader under
mysterious circumstances sparked violent disorders that led to French
military intervention at Port-Gentil to protect French nationals and
their property. Order was restored, and implementation of the plans for
political reform continued. Legislative elections were held in the fall,
and, although opposition parties won seats in the new legislative
assembly, electoral irregularities allowed the PDG to retain a small
majority. The following year a new constitution was promulgated in
March.
After the restoration of a multiparty democracy, Bongo was reelected
in 1993 and 1998, although both elections were clouded with allegations
of fraud. A constitutional amendment passed in 2003 removed presidential
term limits and allowed Bongo to stand in the 2005 election, which he
also won. In general, the PDG was equally successful during the 1990s
and 2000s in legislative and most local elections. However, the PDG’s
overall grip on power was briefly threatened by popular dissatisfaction
following the December 1993 presidential election and a subsequent 50
percent devaluation of the currency in January 1994, which sparked
protests in several cities, during which three dozen people were killed
and scores injured. After the demonstrations were suppressed, the
government granted modest salary increases and placed controls on
soaring prices of largely imported basic commodities.
Many of Gabon’s financial problems resulted from protracted and
large-scale corruption among government officials and business leaders.
Although this group comprised just 2 percent of the population, they
came to control some 80 percent of all personal income. In addition to
receiving large salaries, they diverted funds from public works and
services, as well as the income from at least one-fourth of the oil
sales, and transferred vast sums of money to foreign accounts. To
counteract this financial drain, the government borrowed money, and by
the late 1990s debt service constituted some two-fifths of the national
budget. The government turned regularly to France for funds and for help
in canceling and rescheduling debts. By the late 1990s Gabon was under
pressure from the International Monetary Fund to privatize state
corporations and to eliminate the diversion of state funds, which the
country was able to show some progress with during the 2000s. Gabon was
able to reschedule a significant amount of debt in 2004.
In 2009 rumours persisted that Bongo was not in good health,
particularly in May, when he suspended his presidential duties for the
first time since he took office in 1967 and checked into a clinic in
Spain—ostensibly to rest and mourn the death of his wife, who had passed
away in March. Initial reports of his death on June 7, 2009, were denied
by the Gabon government; an official announcement the next day indicated
he died on June 8. Senate president Rose Francine Rogombé was sworn in
as interim president two days later, and an election was scheduled for
August 30. More than 20 candidates initially announced their intent to
stand in the election, including Bongo’s son, defense minister Ali Ben
Bongo, who was selected to be the PDG’s candidate. After a slight delay
in the release of the election results and amid allegations of fraud and
voting irregularities, Bongo was declared the winner with slightly more
than two-fifths of the vote.
David E. Gardinier
Ed.