One-time Minister of Aviation in Nigeria, Femi Fani-Kayode has reacted to the coup in Gabon.
Recall that the members of the Gabon Armed Forces announced that they had taken over power in the country in a broadcast via national television on Wednesday, August 30.
According to the military, they were setting aside the results of the country’s election on Saturday, August 26, in which President Ali Bongo was declared the winner.
Bongo had won 64.27 percent votes in the election, with his main opponent, Ondo Ossa following with 30.77 per cent of the votes. However, observers had said that it was fraudulent as numerous polling stations opened hours late, amid claims of ballot slips not being deployed correctly and the authorities cutting internet service and imposing a night-time curfew after the vote. The country suspended broadcasts by French television on the election results.
Bongo inherited power from his father who was also French-backed, in 2009, and both father and son have been in control of the country for more than half a century.
Reacting to the development, Fani-Kayode stated that the hegemony of the French in Africa is almost over. He added that France has been challenged, humiliated, ridiculed, diminished, demystified, and rubbished by most of their erstwhile African colonies and the hatred, contempt, opprobrium, and disdain that they attract from the overwhelming majority of Africans is mind-boggling and unprecedented.
He tweeted;
“With events in Gabon today it is fair to say that the hegemony of the French in Africa is almost over. They have been challenged, humiliated, ridiculed, diminished, demystified, and rubbished by most of their erstwhile African colonies and the hatred, contempt, opprobrium, and disdain that they attract from the overwhelming majority of Africans is mind-boggling and unprecedented.
“If they don’t submit to the will of the African people, put their little French tails between their legs, bow down to the local population, and beat a hasty and dignified retreat back to France with at least a measure of their dignity still intact they will be thrown out by the force of arms just as they were in Viet Nam and Algeria. The cry on the African continent today is liberty and freedom from the tyrannical bondage and venomous yoke of the French and deliverance from their perverted, pervasive and corrosive ways and systemic oppression.
“Simply put, Francophone Africans are no longer interested in being slaves or in being ruled by a series of vicious, corrupt, perfidious, and barbaric puppet leaders, pseudo monarchs, and lifetime dictators who have sold their bodies, spirits, and souls to the devil and their French masters. Kudos to them!”
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