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One of Africa’s longest political dynasties looks set to extend its half century of rule, after sources inside Gabon’s electoral commission told Reuters that the incumbent president Ali Bongo had won another term with 49.85% of the vote.

Ali Bongo the winner of the Gabonese elections
Ali Bongo the winner of the Gabonese elections

The commission was expected to announce that the opposition candidate Jean Ping, a half-Chinese diplomat who was previously in the Bongo family’s trusted circle, narrowly lost with 48.16%, after a fraught election that observers warned as likely to result in violence.

Ping’s party, which claimed victory soon after the vote, rejected the claimed result and demanded a recount in Haut Ogooué, a Bongo stronghold, which according to the sources, the commission was to claim saw a 99.93% turnout as the Guardian reports.

The national election commission (Cenap) was due to announce the result on Tuesday afternoon at 5pm local time, but delayed repeatedly and still had not declared the winner 19 hours later.

Many Gabonese suggested that five days to count 600,000 votes was excessive.

Several analysts, including François Conradie, with NKC African Economics, suspected fraud.

“We think, based on what the opposition has reported and on what sources have told us about people’s voting preferences in Gabon, that Mr Ping won more votes than Mr Bongo, and this election is a one-round, first-past-the-post contest. It seems that the fight is happening within the Cenap,” Conradie said.

Residents of Libreville ventured out in the early morning to buy groceries but later stayed at home in anticipation of violent protests. The army has been deployed to the capital’s streets, and opposition members reported that their houses were surrounded by police.

UM– USEKE.RW

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