
Gabon's authentic media guard dog on Friday said it had suspended a paper for three months for an article saying the nation was on "autopilot" after the hospitalization of President Ali Bongo in Saudi Arabia two weeks prior.
Absence of authority news — alongside recollections of the mystery covered death of Bongo's dad, Omar Bongo, who kicked the bucket in office in 2009 after decades in charge — has set the gossip process beating at maximum capacity with recommendations that he is debilitated or even dead.
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L'Aube (Dawn) paper on Monday ran a story featured "Gabon on (extremely hazardous) autopilot" and recommended that Prime Minister Lucie Mboussou be designated between time president.
The representative of the High Authority of Communications (HAC) guard dog said it was not up to the media or any other individual to give "risky" translations of the law.
"Law is a science and the specialized elucidation of legitimate writings" was a specific undertaking, Lucie Akalane said.
The paper's proofreader, Orca Boudiandza Mouelle, was likewise prohibited for a half year.
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Toward the finish of October, the HAC took Cameroonian TV station Vision 4 off the air for declaring that 59-year-old Bongo was dead.
Bongo's representative Ike Ngouoni said specialists had determined him to have "serious weariness" and requested bed rest.
A remote source near the couple told AFP on Wednesday that Bongo had a stroke.
Bongo is anyway still authoritatively expected in Paris on Sunday for a function denoting the 100th commemoration of the peace negotiation that finished World War I.
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