The African Union’s Peace and Security Council yesterday suspended Central African Country Gabon where soldiers took over government on Wednesday.
The junta will on Monday inaugurate its leader, Gen. Brice Nguema as the “transitional president of the troubled country.
But Gabon’s main opposition, the Alternance 2023 coalition, wants the coup leaders to declare it as the winner of Saturday’s disputed presidential election.
President Ali Bongo Ondimba, who was named winner of the poll , was overthrown by soldiers on Wednesday, hours after the country’s electoral body declared him re-elected for another term of seven years.
While Ondimba’s ouster and detention drew international condemnations, the Gabonese trooped to the streets hailing the soldiers for ending the Bongo family’s almost 56 years in power.
After a meeting of its Peace and Security Council on the situation, the AU said it had decided to “suspend the participation of Gabon in all activities of its organs and institutions”.
The AU said the meeting was chaired by its Commissioner for Political Affairs Bankole Adeoye and the current holder of the council’s rotating chair, Burundi’s Nyamitwe.
The swearing-in of Gen. Nguema will take place at the constitutional court, said the junta’s Spokesman, Col. Ulrich Manfoumbi, yesterday.
Following the Gabon coup, two African countries moved to ward off the Niger and Gabon experiences by retiring their generals and rejigging their military structures.
The countries are Rwanda which sent 12 generals and 678 soldiers packing and Cameroon which reorganised its Defence Ministry by making new appointments.
Rwanda’s Defence Force (RDF) said President Paul Kagame approved retirements in the military that included officers serving as ambassadors. He also okayed the appointment of a fresh set of generals to lead Army divisions
In Cameroon, President Paul Biya, one of Africa’s longest-serving leaders, made fresh appointments(controllers) within the Defence Ministry’s central administrative unit.
The new controllers are Captain Ajeagah Félix and Colonel Nguema Bourger.