BREAKING: Tinubu reacts to the coup in Gabon, says rule of law must not perish
President Bola Tinubu has expressed his deep concern over the political development in Gabon with the takeover of the government by the military.
The president also bemoaned the sociopolitical stability of the oil-rich Central African country and what looks like an autocratic contagion spreading across different regions in the African continent.
This was made known by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Ajuri Ngelale while speaking to State House correspondents on Wednesday, where he expressed President Tinubu’s belief that the rule of law and a faithful recourse to the constitutional resolution of electoral disputes must not be allowed to perish in Africa.
The reaction from Tinubu is coming a few hours after a group of Gabonese military officers appeared on television Wednesday announcing they were “putting an end to the current regime” and canceling an election that, according to official results, President Ali Bongo Ondimba won.
This is also coming at a time Nigeria, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), and the African Union are still battling with the crisis in Niger Republic as a result of the forceful takeover of government by the military.
Power does not belong in the barrel of a gun
The Presidential media aide said,
- “President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is watching developments in Gabon very closely with deep concern for the country’s sociopolitical stability and the seeming autocratic contagion spreading across different regions of our beloved continent.
- “The president, as a man who has made significant personal sacrifices in his own life, in the cause of advancing and defending democracy, has all of the unwavering belief that power belongs in the hands of Africa’s great people, and not in the barrel of a loaded gun.”
Ngelale added that Tinubu affirmed that “the rule of law and a faithful recourse to constitutional resolutions and instruments of electoral dispute resolution must not at any time be allowed to perish from our great continent”.
According to him, the President is “working very closely and continuing to communicate with other heads of state in the African Union towards a comprehensive consensus on the next steps forward concerning how the crisis in Gabon will play out into how the continent will respond to the contagion of autocracy we are seeing spread across our continent”.
This is a developing story…