- Analyst criticizes Femi Fani-Kayode for diverting attention with comments on Gabon coup, calls it a tactic to hide sins
- Analyst accuses Fani-Kayode of painting inaccurate picture of Gabon coup, says it was against corrupt politicians, not France
MacDaniel Mark, a public affairs analyst and commentator, has condemned former Aviation Minister Femi Fani-Kayode for referring to a military coup that deposed Gabonese President Ali Bongo.
WITHIN NIGERIA had earlier reported that some top army officers seized power from the democratically elected government of Bongo, who just won a presidential election on Saturday.
Bongo has been in power since 2009 when he succeeded his father, who died while in office.
As twelve officers announced the takeover on national television, the coupists announced the end of the 53-year reign of Bongo’s family in the Central African country.
In response to the latest coup on African soil, Fani-Kayode took to social media and warned that the coup would continue to ravage Africa unless African leaders heeded his warning.
The chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) wrote;
BREAKING NEWS: Sadly another coup has taken place in Africa.
This time it is in the nation of Gabon where President Ali Bongo (pictured below), who together with his late father Alhaji Bongo, had been in power for the last 53 years has been toppled and removed from office.
It appears that the warning I gave in my last essay, titled, ‘Does Killing Nigerien Babies Bring Glory To Our Name?’, was prophetic.
Fani-Kayode further said he was not surprised at the incident saying;
I am not surprised that this has happened and frankly we should expect more coups in the Francophone countries of West and Central Africa for the reasons I stated in that essay. I wonder whether ECOWAS or the African Union will threaten to invade Gabon as well?
In response, Mark, in a statement, said the APC Chieftain was deliberately trying to divert attention from his sins.
I find the statement by Femi Fani-Kayode about the coup d’etat in Gabon highly diversionary. He was deliberately and desperately trying to divert attention from his sins.
He spoke out of the fear of nemesis, but unfortunately for him, karma cannot be manipulated. For the records, the coup in Gabon wasn’t against France as he would like to have it painted, but against corrupt and avaricious politicians that seek political power at all costs just to plunder their nations and impoverish the citizenry.
Fani-Kayode and his ilk should hide their faces in shame if they have any vestige of decency left in their egregiously battered reputation,” the statement, titled, ‘Femi Fani-Kayode’s Statement About The Coup In Gabon, A Diversionary Tactic,’ read in part.
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