The constitutional court rejected calls for a recount |
Gabon's constitutional court has upheld
President Ali Bongo's election victory, rejecting opposition calls for a
recount.
There have been fears that such a decision
could trigger fresh violence.
The
government said it would hold opposition leader Jean Ping responsible if
clashes erupted following the ruling.
President
Bongo won August's election by just 6,000 votes but the opposition says the
poll was rigged.
Following the court ruling, President Bongo
called for a "political dialogue" with the opposition.
Correspondents
say residents of Libreville were stockpiling food ahead of the court ruling.
There were long queues at banks and supermarkets on Friday and the French
embassy told its citizens to stay indoors.
Riot police have been deployed across the
city.
Mr
Ping had alleged fraud in one of the president's main strongholds, Haut-Ogooue
province, where Mr Bongo won 95% of the vote on a turnout of 99.9%.
Mr
Ping had warned that Gabon could face serious instability if the court rejected
his appeal for a recount in that province.
The
court partially changed the results of the bitterly-fought election, giving
President Bongo 50.66% of the vote and Mr Ping 47.24%.
The result of the election on 27 August
sparked days of deadly violence.
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