Global News : Passport : Ricks : Drezner : Walt : Rothkopf : Lynch
The Cable : The AfPak Blog : Net Effect : Shadow Govt. : Madam Secretary : The Call
Africa's longest-ruling leader dies. Does his era die with him?

Behold the legacy of Omar Bongo. The former member of the French Air Force became a archetypal Afrian "big man." He gave favors for political advantage. He remained staunchly close to former colonial power, France. Though oil exports brought in billions of dollars (about 80 percent of last year's $8.5 billion in trade), profits enriched only a small elite. On the plus side, he did keep the country out of regional conflicts, for example in the nearby Democratic Republic of the Congo. And he didn't stir up any "trouble" of his own. But his reign went on and on and on and on, despite his introducing democratic (albeit probably rigged) elections in 1993.
As GlobalVoices reports, commentators' responses have been a mixed bag of concern, apprehension, hope, and resentment. In the capital, Libreville, stores were closed, and some had apparently stockpiled food when the rumors of Bongo's death began to circulate. The anxiety is largely over what happens next. Reuters says that the Speaker of the House is most likely to take over, while others point to Bongo's son, the Minister of Defense.
All eyes are not just on who wins the power struggle to come, but also how they do so. Perhaps in honor of Bongo's legacy, no one is mentioning free and fair elections yet.













Recent comments
42 min 5 sec ago
1 day 7 hours ago
1 day 7 hours ago
1 day 12 hours ago
1 day 12 hours ago
1 day 13 hours ago
1 day 13 hours ago
1 day 13 hours ago
1 day 20 hours ago
1 day 21 hours ago