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Politics

Gabon announces 40-member 'interim' cabinet

May 5, 2018

Gabon’s Prime Minister Emmanuel Issoze-Ngondet has announced an interim government, only days after the country's top court ordered him to resign. The legal decision came after he failed to organize elections.

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President Ali Bongo Ondimba
Ali Bongo took over power from his father Omar Bongo, who had ruled for more than four decades Image: Getty Images/AFP/S. Jordan

State television on Friday carried news of Issoze-Ngondet's new cabinet, comprising a full 40 members — including some political rivals.

Although Gabon's Constitutional Court ruled on Monday that Issoze-Ngondet was no longer the legitimate prime minister, he was sworn back in on Thursday by President Ali Bongo.

Issoze-Ngondet's populous new cabinet is composed of 11 ministers of state, 17 ministers and 12 deputy ministers. It includes seven opposition figures — three of whom are allies of Bongo's political rival Jean Ping.

Read more: Ellen Johnson Sirleaf: 'Democracy is spreading in Africa'

The incoming government is to stay in place until elections, delayed since December 2016, take place. No date has yet been set for a poll. The court had ruled that elections — twice delayed since 2016 — should have been held by the end of April.

Read more: Opinion: Africa's youth waiting for generational change

No parliament is currently in place and the government presently refers to the president after a constitutional change — approved by parliament — which the opposition has described as a power grab.

Bongo was officially re-elected and sworn in as president in 2016, but, because he won by just a few thousand votes, the result proved controversial. He came to power in 2009, after the death of his father Omar Bongo, who had ruled for 41 years.

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rc/bw (AFP, Reuters)