After winning a third term, Ali Bongo has been ousted as president of Gabon by a military coup.
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Ali Bongo is the latest in a string of leaders to be ousted in military coups since 2020.
Shiny backgrounds for photo opportunities figure prominently at the 2022 AU-EU summit in Brussels.
Photo by European Union
The 2022 summit between the European Union and the African Union seeks to renew the intercontinental partnership with massive investments. However, structural patterns of inequality persist.
Demonstrators hold a picture of Lieutenant Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba who led the coup against Burkina Faso president Roch Kabore.
Photo by Olympia De Maismont/AFP via Getty Images
The latest coup now presents a fork in the road for West African, French, and American policymakers.
Former President Roch Marc Christian Kabore has been detained.
Koch / MSC/Wikimedia Commons
Africa saw more coup attempts in 2021 than the preceding five years combined.
Former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe greets supporters massed at his party headquarters shortly before his ouster in 2017.
Jekesai Njikizana/AFP via Getty Images
Leaders typically spread power among their ‘rival allies’ to keep it and co-opt enough of those elites in exchange for political support.
Members of Guinea’s special forces are seen outside the Palace of the People in Conakry, Guinea, Sept. 6, 2021.
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Guineans have experienced military rule before, and they know that the consequences can be dangerous.
Jerry Rawlings ruled Ghana for 20 years
Wikimedia Commons
Jerry Rawlings found a unique path to legitimise his military rule in Ghana.
Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta has resigned.
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Mali’s precarious political situation has been the subject of ECOWAS resolution attempts for months
Tom Thabane, prime minister of Lesotho, during a recent visit to Ethiopia.
Minasse Wondimu Hailu/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
Power is visibly draining away from Tom Thabane. But, even at 80 years old, he remains a wily operator, and seems determined to cause maximum trouble to secure his immunity from prosecution.
A woman casts her ballot in Guinea’s presidential elections in the capital Conakry, in October 2015.
EPA/STR
Popular theories of high-level electoral conspiracy shaped the emergence of new political orientations