Nineteen persons have filed their candidacy to contest in the August 27 presidential elections to be held in Gabon.
The 19 nominations filed by the Tuesday,July 12 deadline must be
validated by the Election Commission (Cenap) no later than 30 days
before the election date, a source close to government told AFP.
It means that tentatively, the incumbent President Ali Bongo Ondimba
who is seeking re-election despite claims by the opposition that he is
not Gabonese, will face 18 other candidates on the ballot paper.
"There was a lot of duplicates on the 2009 list, which was only
computerized, it is why we all started from scratch with biometrics."
Two of the main opposition parties, the “National Union” (UN) and the
“Rally Heritage and Modernity” party, who accuse Ali Bongo’s of being
ineligible, said they filed an appeal on Wednesday with the Cenap to
challenge the president’s candidacy.
They claim that Ali Bongo is a Nigerian child adopted by former
President Omar Bongo in the late 1960s and further accuse him of
falsifying his civil status. According to them, he cannot be a president
under the Constitution, which requires him to be a Gabonese.
Electoral roll figures fall
The electoral list published last week identified 628,124 voters,
down from the 2009 presidential elections, which had 813,164 voters. Ali
Bongo won the polls and succeeded his late ‘father’, who had been in
power for 41 years.
According to a source at the Interior Ministry, this difference is
explained by the introduction of biometric electoral list in 2013:
“There was a lot of duplicates on the 2009 list, which was only
computerized, it is why we started from scratch with biometrics.”
Some of the leading contenders Bongo is likely to face include
several former chiefs loyal to his fathers’ regime, but are now in
opposition. Among others are former President of the Commission of the
African Union, Jean Ping; former President of the National Assembly, Guy
Nzouba Ndama and the former governor of the Bank of Central African
States, Casimir Oye Mba.
Africanews
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