Ali Bongo photograph

Ali Bongo

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Gender Male
Date of birth December 8,1929
Zodiac sign Sagittarius
Born England
United Kingdom
DiedLondon
United Kingdom
Caus of deathPneumonia
BooksAli Bongo's Book of Magic, Be a Magician, The Big Book of Magic
Movies/Shows Magicians
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID3201655
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Ali Bongo Life story


William Oliver Wallace, known by his stage name Ali Bongo, was a British comedy magician and former president of The Magic Circle who performed an act in which he was known as the "Shriek of Araby".

Gabon coup: New PM tells BBC country should hold elections within two years

Gabon coup: New PM tells BBC country should hold elections within two years
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... The junta which overthrew President Ali Bongo has promised a free and fair election, but not set out a timetable...

Gabon coup leader Brice Nguema sworn in as president

Gabon coup leader Brice Nguema sworn in as president
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... General Nguema led last Wednesday s coup against Ali Bongo, toppling the president shortly after he was named winner of a disputed election...

Gabon coup: Military chief says suspension of democracy only 'temporary'

Gabon coup: Military chief says suspension of democracy only 'temporary'
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... The deposed president, Ali Bongo, was placed under house arrest this week...

Macron looks on as France's Africa policy crumbles

Macron looks on as France's Africa policy crumbles
Sep 1,2023 8:11 pm

... To take the case of Gabon - often seen as the emblem of corrupt post-colonialism - it is certainly true that deposed President Ali Bongo s father Omar Bongo was regarded condescendingly as " one of ours" by successive French presidents, and benefited accordingly, as did they...

Gabon coup: Why military takeovers are all the rage

Gabon coup: Why military takeovers are all the rage
Aug 30,2023 10:51 pm

...By Paul MellyAfrica analystYet another coup in Africa - just five weeks after Niger s President Mohamed Bazoum was taken hostage by the troops of his own presidential guard, Gabon s Ali Bongo also finds himself detained in his own residence...

Gabon coup leaders name General Brice Oligui Nguema as new leader

Gabon coup leaders name General Brice Oligui Nguema as new leader
Aug 30,2023 9:51 pm

... The deposed President, Ali Bongo, has appeared in a video at his home, calling on his " friends all over the world" to " make noise" on his behalf...

Army officers say they are taking power in Gabon

Army officers say they are taking power in Gabon
Aug 30,2023 1:11 am

... They said they were annulling the results of Saturday s election, in which President Ali Bongo was declared the winner...

Emmanuel Macron's mission to counter Russia in Africa

Emmanuel Macron's mission to counter Russia in Africa
Mar 3,2023 8:30 pm

... Furthermore opponents of Gabon s President Ali Bongo Ondimba and DR Congo s President Félix Tshisekedi have been complaining that Mr Macron s visit could be read as interference to bolster the image of these incumbent rulers in what is an election year for both countries...

Macron looks on as France's Africa policy crumbles

Jun 29,2022 4:35 am

By Hugh SchofieldBBC News, Paris

Why is it so often That problems seem to get worse just When They ought to be getting better?

Or in a French-African context, how come President Emmanuel Macron is surveying the tatters of French Policy - coups in four Francophone states - just When he thought he had turned his back on all The Wicked post-colonialism of the old Days ?

No-one disputes That there was indeed a long period - roughly corresponding to the Cold War - When France used a certain amount of skulduggery and military muscle to further its interests in.

But no-one can dismiss, either, the fact That for The Last quarter-century The Message from Paris has been That Those Days - officially at least - are over.

Gone The Automatic request for French soldiers to back up a teetering autocrat; gone the millions in backhanders That helped finance French Political Parties .

Instead today's buzzwords are " democratisation" " empowerment" " co-operation" and " engagement with the young". According to an official at the Élysée Palace: " It's been a very long time since we had our men in presidential palaces. "

Maybe it would be naive to pretend That all is above board, and That there aren't still nefarious pressures and sweeteners passing back and forth between Paris and francophone capitals.

But surely it is also a wild exaggeration to claim That French influence is anything like it used to be.

To take the case of Gabon - often seen as the emblem of corrupt post-colonialism - it is certainly true That deposed President Ali Bongo 's father Omar Bongo was regarded condescendingly as " one of ours" by successive French presidents, and benefited accordingly, as did They .

But if French reach is still so great, how is it That Ali Bongo made moves to pull Gabon out of the Francosphere to The Point of actually joining The Commonwealth Last Year ?

The Bongos ' amassment of Wealth - and its secretion In Paris - was No Doubt legendary. But was it not The Action of French anti-corruption judges, unimpeded by politicians, That led to its exposure and to criminal proceedings against members of the Bongo family, arguably pushing Ali into the arms of the Anglos?

And if Paris still has pull over neighbouring Cameroon, how come its leader Paul Biya recently attended the Franco-Russian summit in St Petersburg, smiling alongside Vladimir Putin ?

The fact is - according to journalist Amaury Coutansais, author of Macron's African Trap - That France is living through a " historical anachronism" in which it is attributed powers That simply do not exist any more.

" Africa has been globalising, " he says. " These Days African presidents have the whole world in their waiting-rooms: Turks, Russians, Israel, even allies of France like Germany and the United States . "

" Oppositions in Africa Imagine That France is still all-powerful. In reality, while France was doing all the dirty police work, its rivals were sweeping up the contracts. "

So to return to the original question: if French influence is on the wane in Africa, how come it is now That We Are seeing the fiercest backlash against it?

Surely it would have been more appropriate When former President Charles De Gaulle 's Jacques Foccart , really was arranging coups d'état in the 1960s and beyond, and When bags of Dirty Money really were transiting to Le Bourget airport near Paris .

The Answer comes in two parts.

First, there is some deep-rooted psychological reason why, in all sorts of areas, The Perception of a problem's seriousness grows in proportion to its apparent amelioration. There's probably a law somewhere That describes The Process .

When people are deeply buried in an injustice or discrimination, They find it hard to see the bigger picture. Small improvements are All That can be expected and are welcomed. Only When people begin to imagine a full emancipation, do They perceive the full extent of their subjection. And They get angrier.

That 's one theory. France's colonial presence in the Sahel and Central Africa was so entrenched That it was bound to provoke an increased sense of outrage among today's more self-confident generations. As Coutansais says: " Everything Passes - except The Past . "

The Second explanation does not contradict The First , but acts as a complement.

This is That the French are not wrong in seeing outside hands at work.

In a speech to French ambassadors on Monday, President Macron described the " baroque alliance between self-proclaimed pan-Africans and neo-imperialists" which He Said had provoked the recent " epidemic of putsches" in French-speaking Africa, referring to Gabon , Niger, Burkina Faso , Guinea and Mali.

In President Macron's eyes, the " neo-imperialists" are Russia and China, which he believes have dripped poison words into the over-eager minds of wannabe putschists, and hypocritically stirred up old arguments over sovereignty and colonial exploitation.

For him, France is in the Sahel not for the sake of overpowering its former colonies, but " because there is a terrorist threat, and sovereign states asked us to help".

To Believe otherwise, He Said on Monday, was To Live in a " world gone mad".

Quite evidently, though, many people do prefer the Conspiracy Theory , which is why, just When things should be getting better - They are getting worse.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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