
Gabon, represented by Marc Abeghe, Minister Delegate for the Budget, and Ambassador Régis Immongault, Permanent Representative to the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States OEACP, attended the Bureau of the Council of Ministers meeting in Brussels on July 15, 2026. This strategic meeting, held in preparation for the 121st ministerial session, focused on institutional reforms, the implementation of the Samoa Agreement, and strengthening the OEACP's role internationally. As coordinator for the Central Africa region and a member of the Bureau, Gabon actively participated, reaffirming its commitment to dialogue among member states and consolidating the organization's political and institutional role. The meeting, chaired by Seedy K. M. Keita, Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs of Gambia, emphasized accelerating the implementation of the Malabo Declaration and the Samoa Agreement, alongside ongoing institutional reforms. Discussions also covered the OEACP's financial viability and strategic repositioning in a changing geopolitical and economic landscape. Secretary General Moussa Saleh Batraki highlighted the collective responsibility of member states, resource mobilization, and the need for a more effective, credible, and results-oriented organization. The Gabonese delegation supported the Bureau's orientations, particularly advancements toward more inclusive governance through enhanced consultation among regional coordinations, member states, and the general
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In Libreville, Gabon, women farmers are observing significant changes in agricultural seasons, making traditional planting calendars unreliable for crops like cassava, bananas, and sorrel. This shift highlights a historical reversal where the environment now dictates conditions for human activities, rather than humans solely impacting the environment. Adrien NKoghe-Mba, President of the Léon MBA Institute, reflects on a Gabon 24 report featuring these farmers and insights from biologist Olivier Hamant. Hamant explains that while the focus was once on humanity's impact on nature, the current challenge is nature's impact on human endeavors. The unpredictability of seasons directly affects agricultural practices, market availability, and food prices in the capital. NKoghe-Mba emphasizes that "ecological and social transformation of territories" is not merely international conference jargon but a matter of ordinary survival. He argues for a shift from unchecked resource extraction to sustainable management, adaptation, and renewal. Crucially, this transformation must improve people's lives, such as providing farmers with support to adjust to new climate patterns through resilient crop varieties, irrigation techniques, and agricultural advice. For Gabon, with its vast forest cover and national parks, this presents both an opportunity and an urgent need to act now and negotiate with the changing world, rather than passively endure its effects.

Gabon's Minister of Universal Access to Water and Energy, Phillippe Tonangoye, is representing the country at the African Water Forum in N'Djamena, Chad, which began on July 15. The continental meeting, co-organized by the Chadian government and the World Bank Group, aims to culminate in the signing of the N'Djamena Declaration and the launch of National Water Pacts. This event is crucial for Gabon, where access to drinking water remains a significant challenge. The forum is the first continental stage of Water Forward, a global initiative launched by the World Bank in April to secure water access for one billion people by 2030. It brings together heads of state, ministers of finance, water, and agriculture, multilateral development banks, and private operators. The opening ceremony, featuring speeches by Marshal Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno, President of the Republic of Chad, and Anna Bjerde, Managing Director of Operations for the World Bank Group, emphasized moving from declarations of intent to investments. Phillippe Tonangoye is participating in a high-level panel on "Water Forward in Africa" alongside his counterparts from Chad, the Central African Republic, Côte d'Ivoire, and Senegal. This ministerial panel, moderated by Saroj Kumar Jha, Global Director for Water at the World Bank Group, and Ahmadou Bakayoko, CEO of Eranove, focuses on Water Pacts as national platforms aligning public policies, financing, and implementation for water security. A high-level session on finan
Must ReadGabon's Constitutional Court has officially begun the decisive phase of verifying the provisional results of the General Population and Housing Census RGPL. This follows the government's submission of the provisional report to the Court on July 14, a week after it was presented to the President of the Republic by the Minister of Planning and Foresight. The Vice-President of the Government, Hermann Immongault, handed the document to the President of the Constitutional Court, Dieudonné Aba’a Owono, at its headquarters in Libreville. The Court is now tasked with homologating the results, which involves ensuring the regularity and sincerity of the census operations across the national territory. This institution is the sole body authorized to validate these provisional results. Its mission includes deploying specially trained delegates to various provinces to gather observations from local administrative authorities and the population. Following this control, the Court may homologate the results, make rectifications, or, in cases of serious irregularities, order a new census in certain localities. Hermann Immongault emphasized the strategic importance of this census, the first since 2013, for updating demographic data crucial for public policies, including electoral redistricting and targeting social support mechanisms for economically vulnerable Gabonese citizens. Initial trends indicate the demographic predominance of the Estuaire province, followed by Ogooué-Maritime and Haut-