As Gabon’s election campaign approaches its end and President Omar Bongo looks set to cruise to victory, only fraud allegations and voter apathy still have the potential to rain on his parade, according to analysts. “The 27 November election is meaningless because the playing field is so uneven,” said Bissielo Anacle, head of the sociology department at Omar Bongo University in the capital Libreville. “As a result, there could be very low voter turnout.” After 38 years in power, Bongo is the longest-serving current head of state in Africa. But although he faces four opposition candidates, a sixth term, made possible by a 2003 constitutional amendment, is a virtual certainty. Despite numerous billboards with messages like ‘I’m a secretary and I’m voting!’ and calls from candidates urging people to take part in the Central African country’s third multi-party elections, the numbers reveal a lack of enthusiasm among the general population. In the oil centre of Port Gentil, for example, under half of registered voters have gone to the trouble of getting their election card, according to a Gabonese news agency. However, this apathy is not due to a lack of effort on Bongo’s part, according to Philippe Ndong of the University of Libreville. “The president is spending a lot of money to buy votes,” he said. “He’s becoming more and more generous at the last minute to encourage people to vote for him.” In September, even before an election date was set, Bongo announced that he was making public schooling free. Three weeks later, he offered a month’s worth of free water and electricity to 100,000 households. And during the campaign, cash has regularly been handed out to supporters at political rallies. “The regime is so disconnected from the people that the only way it can communicate is by handing out financial perks,” said Anacle. By African standards, Gabon is a rich country, with a per capita GDP that is three and a half times higher than the sub-Saharan average thanks to a small population and revenues from natural resources that include oil, gold and manganese ore. But the country’s coffers are not bottomless. “Bongo wants to be president for life but he’s no longer looking out for the country’s interests because he doesn’t have the funds,” said Pascal Bekale, a Libreville office worker who said he would not be voting on Sunday. “The end of petrol money is coming and nothing has been prepared for the future.” Fears of fraud In addition to allegations of shady campaign tactics, there are concerns about how legitimate the actual voting process will be. “Since 1990, every election result has been contested because of skewed mechanisms and this year again, there is no transparency,” said the sociologist Anacle.
Gabon lies in the oil-rich Gulf of Guinea |
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