Gabonese voters headed to the polls on Saturday for the first round of legislative and local elections, marking another step in the country’s political transition following the end of the Bongo family’s decades-long rule.
More than 1,600 candidates are competing for 145 parliamentary seats, while around 17,000 contenders are vying for municipal and departmental positions. Those elected will play a decisive role in shaping Gabon’s governance, including the selection of mayors, departmental assembly leaders, and senators.
The vote comes just months after coup leader Brice Oligui Nguema secured a sweeping victory in the April presidential election, the first since his 2023 takeover ended more than half a century of Bongo family dominance.
Over 20 political parties are participating in the polls, among them Nguema’s Democratic Union of Builders and the Gabonese Democratic Party, the former ruling party founded by late president Omar Bongo.
The Interior Ministry assured the public that measures have been put in place to guarantee a free, fair, and transparent election, with international observers monitoring the process.