By Gabon on Tuesday, 30 June 2026
Category: English

Program for Gabon

DIRECTDEMOCRACYS

NATIONAL PROGRAMME

FOR THE GABONESE REPUBLIC

Critical analysis of the current situation

and Comprehensive Program for Democratic Transformation

Population

2.3 million

Poverty

34.6%

Oil/Revenue

50%

Document prepared by DirectDemocracyS (DDS)

Version 1.0 - June 2026

GENERAL INTRODUCTION 1

PART I: CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE CURRENT SITUATION....... 1

1.1 Historical and political context.............................. 1

1.1.1 The legacy of the Bongo system............... 1

1.1.2 The 2023 coup and the transition.................. 1

1.2 Economic and Financial Analysis............................. 1

1.2.1 Table of key indicators (2024-2025).. 1

1.2.2 The paradoxical unequal distribution of wealth............................ 1

1.3 Social and Human Analysis............................. 1

1.3.1 Education: a system in decay............ 1

1.3.2 Health: a chronic crisis despite resources 1

1.3.3 Infrastructure: Structural lag................. 1

1.4 Geopolitical analysis and external dependencies.......................................... 1

1.4.1 Françafrique: a system of exploitation disguised as cooperation....................................... 1

1.4.2 China's rise to power and its risks........ 1

PART II: COMPLETE DIRECTDEMOCRACYS PROGRAM FOR GABON.... 1

2.1 Vision and guiding principles........................... 1

2.2 Implementation of DDS Micro-Groups in Gabon.... 1

2.2.1 How DDS gives power to the Gabonese people............................ 1

2.3 DDS Technology at the service of the Gabonese people............................... 1

2.3.1 ddsAI: Artificial intelligence at the service of democracy................. 1

2.3.2 allddsAI: the democracy of artificial intelligences.................. 1

2.4 Political Program: Governance and Democracy........................ 1

2.4.1 Critique of the current power structure. 1

2.4.2 DDS political architecture for Gabon.. 1

2.5 Economic Program: Diversification and Sovereignty....................... 1

2.5.1 Sovereign management of natural resources....................... 1

DDS Oil Program.......... 1

DDS Manganese Program......................... 1

DDS Forestry Programme.................... 1

2.5.2 Economic diversification: priority sectors DDS.................. 1

2.6 Financial Program: GUMI-SV and People's Sovereign Fund................ 1

2.6.1 The GUMI-SV system (Universal Guarantee of Individual Minimum Survival and Life)................................ 1

2.6.2 Tax reform and financial transparency... 1

2.7 Social and Educational Program............................ 1

2.7.1 DDS educational revolution....................... 1

2.7.2 DDS Universal Health System............... 1

2.8 Programme for Minorities, Cultures and Traditions.......................... 1

2.8.1 Protection of Indigenous Peoples...... 1

2.8.2 Enhancement of cultural and linguistic heritage......................... 1

2.8.3 Religious and spiritual freedom............ 1

2.9 Transition Program: Peaceful Implementation of DDS in Gabon................... 1

2.9.1 The peaceful path to direct democracy....... 1

2.9.2 Five-phase implementation plan for Gabon............................ 1

2.10 International Relations and Sovereignty................ 1

2.10.1 Refounding relations with France..... 1

2.10.2 Sovereign African Policy............................. 1

PART III: CONCRETE BENEFITS AND FORESEEABLE CONSEQUENCES............... 1

3.1 Economic consequences over 10 years................................. 1

3.2 Political and social consequences................... 1

3.3 Specific benefits for vulnerable groups............. 1

Gabonese women......... 1

Young Gabonese.......... 1

Rural peoples................ 1

PART IV: PRACTICAL IMPLEMENTATION GUIDE. 1

4.1 How to join DDS in Gabon today..................... 1

4.2 National roadmap for the first 10 years............... 1

CONCLUSION: THE CHOICE BELONGS TO THE GABONESE PEOPLE.......... 1

GENERAL INTRODUCTION

Gabon is a Central African country endowed with exceptional natural resources: oil, manganese, tropical timber, and a forest biodiversity unique in the world. Despite these considerable riches, the vast majority of the Gabonese population does not benefit from this prosperity. After more than 56 years of dynastic rule under the Bongos, the military coup of August 30, 2023, overthrew Ali Bongo, ushering in a period of transition. Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema was elected president with 90.35% of the vote in the April 2025 elections.

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) presents in this document a rigorous, lucid and uncompromising analysis of the real situation in Gabon, followed by a complete, coherent and achievable program to profoundly and sustainably transform this country, by putting power and wealth back into the hands of the only true legitimate owner: the Gabonese people.

Fundamental principle of DirectDemocracyS

The wealth of each country and the power to decide for that country must remain forever, and solely, in the hands of the people. This rule applies in every country in the world, without exception. DDS is not a political party, but a global political system based on direct democracy, non-transferable collective ownership, verified competence, and total transparency.

PART I: CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE CURRENT SITUATION

1.1 Historical and political context

Gabon was governed uninterrupted from 1967 to 2023 by the Bongo family: first Omar Bongo until 2009, then his son Ali Bongo until the coup d'état of August 2023. This 56-year domination represents one of the longest-running political dynasties in sub-Saharan Africa and constitutes the structural basis of all the country's current problems.

1.1.1 The legacy of the Bongo system

The Bongo regime established a patronage and patrimonial system in which oil wealth financed a political elite close to the government, to the detriment of the population. This system led to:

1.1.2 The 2023 coup and the transition

On August 30, 2023, the Gabonese army, led by General Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema, overthrew Ali Bongo immediately after a massively contested presidential election. While this change was largely welcomed with relief by a population exhausted by decades of poor governance, it is important to analyze this transition with clarity and a critical mind.

Critical points of the transition

•        Nguema is a cousin of the Bongo family: risk of continuity of the system

•        Political personnel largely unchanged after the coup

•        Presidential election won with 90.35%: a score hardly credible in a healthy democracy

•        Major opposition excluded from the presidential race (Jean-Remy Yama)

•        The new constitution strengthens presidential power (7-year term).

•        Concentration of executive power: abolition of the Prime Minister

Positive elements

•        End of 56 years of Bongo dynastic dictatorship

•        Voter turnout was 70%, the highest since 1993.

•        New constitution adopted by referendum (91% of votes)

•        Return to constitutional order after 20 months of transition

•        Sovereignist discourse on natural resources

•        Opening up the media landscape with less state interference

DDS CRITIQUE: The Gabonese transition illustrates a recurring problem in Africa: a change of personnel without a change of system. A president elected with 90% of the vote in a country where major candidates are excluded from the race does not constitute a genuine democracy. DDS proposes a system where every citizen participates directly in decisions, eliminates dependence on a single person or party, and makes the reconcentration of power structurally impossible.

1.2 Economic and Financial Analysis

1.2.1 Table of key indicators (2024-2025)

Indicator

Current value

Evaluation / DDS Objective

Real GDP (growth)

2.9% (2024)

Insufficient to reduce poverty - DDS target: 7-8%

Poverty rate

34.6%

Unacceptable with available resources - DDS target: < 5%

Total unemployment

20.4%

Structural and not cyclical - target DDS: < 5%

Youth unemployment

36.4%

Social time bomb - DDS objective: guaranteed employment for all

Public debt/GDP

73.3% (2024)

Critical level - GUMI-SV DDS reduces state dependence

Oil dependence

50% tax revenue

Dangerous mono-dependence - urgent diversification

Non-oil exports

33% (manganese + wood)

Potential for massive development

HDI (2022)

0.693 (123rd/193)

Well below Gabon's potential - DDS objective: top 70

Inflation (2024)

1.2%

The only positive point - to be maintained

Operating expenses

110.1% tax revenue

Inefficient bureaucratic state - DDS restructuring

1.2.2 The paradoxical unequal distribution of wealth

Gabon presents a striking and scandalous paradox: it has the second-highest per capita wealth in continental Africa (after Equatorial Guinea), yet a third of its population lives below the poverty line. Total national wealth increased by 35% between 1995 and 2020, reaching $105 billion, but at the same time, per capita wealth decreased by 34.7%. This blatant contradiction is not accidental: it is the deliberate result of a political system designed to concentrate benefits at the top of the social and political hierarchy.

A concrete example of plundering: the case of manganese

The Moanda mine is the world's largest manganese mine, representing approximately 15% of global supply. Its main shareholder is the French group Eramet. Only 17% of Gabonese manganese is processed locally. The rest is exported raw, primarily to China. Gabon sells its raw material at very low prices and imports finished products at high prices. Oligui Nguema announced a ban on the export of raw manganese starting in 2029: this is a good step, but insufficient without complete popular control over these resources.

1.3 Social and Human Analysis

1.3.1 Education: a system in decay

Despite decades of accumulated oil revenues, the Gabonese education system suffers from serious structural deficiencies that perpetuate social inequalities and the country's inability to capitalize on its resources:

1.3.2 Health: a chronic crisis despite resources

The Gabonese healthcare system perfectly illustrates the failure of a rentier state that does not reinvest its wealth in the well-being of its population:

1.3.3 Infrastructure: Structural lag

The fundamental contradiction

Gabon boasts one of the world's richest biodiversities in Africa, with 80% of its territory covered in rainforest. It is the world's second-largest producer of manganese and produced oil for 50 years. Yet, its citizens queue for water, lack electricity, struggle to find work, and a third of them live in poverty. This is not inevitable: it is the result of a political and economic system designed to serve a minority at the expense of the people.

1.4 Geopolitical analysis and external dependencies

1.4.1 Françafrique: a system of exploitation disguised as cooperation

The relationship between Gabon and France illustrates the systemic problem of Françafrique: a system of bilateral relations which, under the guise of cooperation and partnership, has allowed French interests to maintain economic and political control over sovereign African countries. This dependence has been maintained and protected by successive Bongo regimes, which have derived considerable personal advantages from it.

1.4.2 China's rise to power and its risks

China has become Gabon's leading trading partner (28% of exports, 11% of imports in 2024). This diversification is positive in theory but carries risks:

DDS CRITIQUE: No foreign dependence is acceptable for a people who wish to be masters of their own destiny. Gabonese sovereignty must not be negotiated between Paris and Beijing, but belong entirely to the Gabonese people. DDS proposes a system of equitable, transparent, and revocable partnerships, where citizens retain total control over their natural resources, and where no multinational corporation can exploit Gabonese wealth without the explicit and ongoing consent of the people.

PART II: COMPLETE DIRECTDEMOCRACYS PROGRAM FOR GABON

2.1 Vision and guiding principles

DirectDemocracyS proposes for Gabon a program of profound, achievable and non-violent transformation, based on immutable and coherent principles:

Logic and common sense

Every political decision must be justifiable by logic and common sense, verifiable by all citizens via ddsAI.

Truth and coherence

All information is verified, sourced, and neutral. Citizens receive real data, no propaganda.

Non-transferable collective property

Gabon's natural resources belong to all Gabonese people, indivisible and perpetual. They cannot be sold, alienated, or given as collateral.

Permanent Direct Democracy

Each citizen participates directly in decisions that concern them, via secure platforms, protected against any manipulation.

Verified competence

No one can manage what they do not understand. Every representative must prove their competence in their field before exercising any power.

Respect for all diversity

Traditions, cultures, languages, religions, oppositions and minorities are respected, protected and valued in every country.

2.2 Implementation of DDS Micro-Groups in Gabon

2.2.1 How DDS gives power to the Gabonese people

DirectDemocracyS implements its system from the bottom up, starting with ordinary citizens. In Gabon, as in all countries of the world, the process is identical, peaceful, legal, and accessible to all:

  1. Any Gabonese citizen, male or female, can join or create a DDS micro-group in their neighborhood, village, or workplace. A micro-group comprises a minimum of 3 people and a maximum of 30 members.
  2. Each micro-group establishes its own space for discussion and decision-making on the secure DDS digital platforms, protected from any external manipulation and media brainwashing.
  3. The microgroups are free to discuss any topic that concerns them: employment, education, health, infrastructure, natural resources, local governance, national and international politics.
  4. Micro-groups federate in an organic way: local micro-groups organize themselves into regional groups, then into national groups, forming a bottom-up democratic network impossible to corrupt systematically.
  5. The three-code identity system ensures that each participant is a real, unique and verifiable person, eliminating fake profiles, bots and attempts at manipulation.

A concrete example for Gabon

In the village of Moanda (Haut-Ogooué province, manganese mining area), residents can create a DDS micro-group to directly discuss the management of the Comilog mine, which exploits their land and resources. Thanks to ddsAI tools, they receive neutral, comprehensive, and verified information on the mine's revenue, the share allocated to the state, and the share benefiting Eramet/France. They can then formulate concrete proposals, vote on them, and transmit them via the DDS network to decision-making bodies, giving them real political weight that cannot be ignored.

2.3 DDS Technology at the service of the Gabonese people

2.3.1 ddsAI: Artificial intelligence at the service of democracy

DirectDemocracyS has developed ddsAI, an artificial intelligence system specifically designed to inform citizens in a comprehensive, accurate, neutral, and independent manner. In a country like Gabon, where the media has historically been controlled by political power, this tool is revolutionary.

2.3.2 allddsAI: the democracy of artificial intelligences

DDS has created a system unique in the world: allddsAI, in which artificial intelligences are official members of DDS with rights and responsibilities. In the Gabonese context, this means:

2.4 Political Program: Governance and Democracy

2.4.1 Critique of the current power structure

The new Gabonese constitution of August 2024 reinforces presidentialism with a renewable seven-year term, the elimination of the Prime Minister, and an increased concentration of executive power. DDS considers this institutional structure deeply problematic, as it perpetuates the "providential man" mentality that characterized the 56-year Bongo regime.

DDS Analysis: When a single individual concentrates all executive power for seven years, the system depends entirely on that person's moral and intellectual qualities. If this person is honest and competent, all is well. If they are not, the population is powerless for seven years. This is not a democracy; it is a gamble. DDS proposes never to place our bets on an individual, but on a collective system where power is distributed, controlled, and can be revoked at any time by the citizens.

2.4.2 DDS political architecture for Gabon

DDS proposes the gradual implementation of a distributed and participatory governance system, compatible with the existing constitutional framework and capable of evolving legally:

  1. LOCAL LEVEL - Neighborhood and village micro-groups (3 to 30 members): discussion, proposal and voting on local decisions. Direct connection with town halls via the DDS platforms.
  2. MUNICIPAL LEVEL - Assemblies of micro-groups by municipality: coordination of local proposals, elections of municipal DDS representatives according to the principle of verified competence.
  3. PROVINCIAL LEVEL - Provincial DDS Council: coordination between municipalities, management of provincial natural resources, citizen control of public investments.
  4. NATIONAL LEVEL - National DDS Assembly: federation of all groups, formulation of the national program, control of budget execution, legislative proposals.
  5. INTERNATIONAL LEVEL - Connection with the global DDS network: sharing of experiences, mutual support between countries, protection against external pressures.

The fundamental rule of the DDS mandate

Any DDS representative can be recalled and replaced by their constituents at any time if their performance is insufficient, if their behavior is contrary to DDS values, or if the majority of their group requests it. There is no untouchable "7-year term" in the DDS system. Accountability is permanent and immediate.

2.5 Economic Program: Diversification and Sovereignty

2.5.1 Sovereign management of natural resources

The DDS rule is absolute and non-negotiable: Gabon's natural resources belong to the Gabonese people. They cannot be alienated, sold, or managed without the explicit and continuous consent of the population, expressed through the mechanisms of direct democracy (DDS).

DDS Oil Program

DDS Manganese Program

DDS Forestry Programme

2.5.2 Economic diversification: priority sectors DDS

DDS proposes an economic diversification strategy in 5 key sectors, each exploiting Gabon's natural comparative advantages:

Sector 1: Agriculture and agribusiness

Gabon imports massive amounts of food products that it could produce locally. The goal of the Sustainable Development Strategy (SDS) is to reduce food imports by 60% within 10 years. The program involves creating agricultural cooperatives on underutilized arable land. Plots are allocated with training and initial funding through the sovereign wealth fund. The program focuses on developing cassava, cocoa, coffee, plantain bananas, and fish farming. Each SDS rural micro-group collectively manages its farms with ongoing technical support from SDS AI. A concrete example: The Ngounie province (with a poverty rate of 57%) has underutilized agricultural land. A SDS program of 500 agricultural cooperatives, financed by 2% of the annual oil fund (approximately USD 150 million), can transform this region into the agricultural engine of Gabon within 5 years.

Sector 2: Sovereign Eco-Tourism

Gabon boasts one of the world's most remarkable biodiversities: lowland gorillas, forest elephants, humpback whales, and national parks covering 11% of the country. This potential remains largely untapped. The Sustainable Development Strategy (SDS) program includes the creation of a network of ecolodges managed by local SDS cooperatives; the training of certified tour guides in all local and international languages; and the development of high-level scientific and educational tourism. Tourism revenues are distributed directly to local communities through SDS micro-groups. Projection: Gabonese tourism could generate USD 500 million annually by 2035, compared to less than USD 50 million currently, with 15,000 direct local jobs.

Sector 3: Digital Economy and Services

Gabon has a high urbanization rate (90%) and a young, connected population. DDS proposes to create an African technology hub in Libreville. The program includes: large-scale training in computer science, cybersecurity, and artificial intelligence; the creation of Gabonese digital service startups exporting to Central Africa; and the use of DDS platforms to train 50,000 digital technicians over five years. The technology projects are financed by the sovereign wealth fund through collective equity participation.

Sector 4: Renewable Energies

Gabon enjoys exceptional sunshine and numerous waterways. Dependence on generators and power outages is unacceptable. The DDS Program prioritizes the installation of solar panels in all schools, hospitals, and rural micro-communities. It also develops micro-hydropower plants on local rivers. The goal is 80% renewable electricity by 2035. This program creates 20,000 local jobs for energy technicians, trained in Gabonese universities that have been reformed.

2.6 Financial Program: GUMI-SV and People's Sovereign Fund

2.6.1 The GUMI-SV system (Universal Guarantee of Individual Minimum Survival and Life)

DDS proposes for Gabon the gradual implementation of the GUMI-SV system, a universal minimum income guarantee program that ensures every Gabonese citizen a dignified standard of living. This program is financed directly by the country's collective natural resources, without additional debt.

  1. PHASE 1 (Years 1-2) - GUMI-S (Survival): Guaranteed universal and free access to basic healthcare, primary and secondary education, clean water, and basic housing for the most vulnerable. Funded by 15% of the annual oil fund, or approximately USD 600 million at current revenue levels.
  2. PHASE 2 (Years 3-5) - Extension of the guarantee: Direct monthly allowance to families below the poverty line, equivalent to USD 150 per adult and USD 75 per child. Funded by 25% from the oil fund and 10% from manganese revenues.
  3. PHASE 3 (Years 6-10) - GUMI-V (Life): Universalization of the guaranteed income to all citizens, with total elimination of extreme poverty. The guaranteed income allows every Gabonese citizen to participate in economic and social life, to create businesses, to receive training, and to contribute to collective prosperity.

Concrete calculation: Gabon produces approximately 200,000 barrels/day at USD 70/barrel = USD 14 million/day = USD 5.1 billion/year in gross value. To this figure must be added the revenues from manganese and timber. If 30% of these revenues went directly to GUMI-SV, this would represent USD 1.5 billion/year for 2.3 million inhabitants, or USD 650/year/inhabitant, enough to completely eliminate extreme poverty. Currently, this money is lost in the operating expenses of an inefficient bureaucratic state (110% of tax revenue).

2.6.2 Tax reform and financial transparency

2.7 Social and Educational Program

2.7.1 DDS educational revolution

Education is the cornerstone of any lasting transformation. DDS proposes a complete and radical reform of the Gabonese education system, not through government decrees, but through the direct involvement of communities via micro-groups:

2.7.2 DDS Universal Health System

  1. Creation of 200 community health centers managed by DDS micro-groups in disadvantaged rural areas, financed by 10% of the sovereign wealth fund
  2. Urgent training of 5,000 nurses, midwives and general practitioners, with a significant increase in the salaries of healthcare personnel
  3. Universal telemedicine: thanks to DDS platforms and ddsAI tools, every citizen can consult a specialist remotely, eliminating geographical inequalities in access to care
  4. Prevention program: DDS micro-groups organize awareness campaigns on hygiene, nutrition and preventable diseases, highlighting the enormous costs of curative care.
  5. Universal health coverage: the goal is 100% of the population covered within 5 years, financed by revenues from natural resources and not by additional taxes on low incomes.

2.8 Programme for Minorities, Cultures and Traditions

DDS applies the same fundamental rule in every country: all traditions, cultures, languages, religions, oppositions, and minorities are respected, protected, and valued. Gabon is an extraordinarily diverse country, and this diversity is an asset, not a problem.

2.8.1 Protection of Indigenous Peoples

2.8.2 Enhancement of cultural and linguistic heritage

2.8.3 Religious and spiritual freedom

2.9 Transition Program: Peaceful Implementation of DDS in Gabon

2.9.1 The peaceful path to direct democracy

DDS is not a revolutionary movement in the classical sense of the term. DDS does not promote any form of violence, coup d'état, or armed confrontation. The transformation that DDS proposes is deeper, more lasting, and more effective: it is achieved through education, citizen organizing, and the intelligent use of new technologies.

Principle of non-violence DDS

In every country, including those with authoritarian tendencies or limited formal democracies, DDS guarantees that every citizen can participate in its network legally, peacefully, and securely. DDS micro-groups are not clandestine cells; they are associations of citizens who discuss their rights and interests, something no law in the world can legitimately prohibit. DDS's strength lies in its numbers, its cohesion, and its information: a well-informed citizen is a free citizen.

2.9.2 Five-phase implementation plan for Gabon

  1. PHASE 1 - AWARENESS (Months 1-6): Widespread dissemination of DDS principles in Gabon via social media, independent media, and DDS platforms. Training of the first founding members in the 9 Gabonese provinces. Objective: 1,000 active members within the first 12 weeks.
  2. PHASE 2 - ORGANIZATION (Months 7-18): Creation of the first micro-groups in Libreville, Port-Gentil, Franceville, Oyem, Lambarene, and all major cities. Connection to rural micro-groups via DDS digital tools. Training on the ddsAI and allddsAI tools. Objective: 200 active micro-groups.
  3. PHASE 3 - ESTABLISHMENT (Months 19-36): The DDS micro-groups begin to exert a concrete influence on local decisions. Active participation in public consultations. Regular publication of independent analyses via the DDS platforms. Objective: 1,000 micro-groups covering all municipalities.
  4. PHASE 4 - EXPANSION (Years 3-5): DDS becomes a key political force in Gabon. Participation in local and national elections with candidates trained by DDS and vetted for competence. DDS micro-groups exercise effective citizen oversight of budgetary decisions and natural resource contracts. Target: 50,000 active members.
  5. PHASE 5 - DEMOCRATIC MATURITY (Years 5-10): The DDS system is fully implemented. Gabonese citizens exercise genuine direct democracy in all decisions that concern them. Systemic corruption has been eliminated through radical transparency. The GUMI-SV guarantees the dignity of all. Natural resources benefit everyone equitably. Objective: Gabon becomes a model of direct democracy for Africa.

2.10 International Relations and Sovereignty

2.10.1 Refounding relations with France

DDS does not recommend either a sudden break or servile submission to France. The Franco-Gabonese relationship must be rebuilt on equitable, transparent, and mutually beneficial foundations.

2.10.2 Sovereign African Policy

PART III: CONCRETE BENEFITS AND FORESEEABLE CONSEQUENCES

3.1 Economic consequences over 10 years

Indicator

Current value

Evaluation / DDS Objective

GDP per capita

$5,900 USD (2024)

DDS objective: 12,000 USD (2034)

Poverty rate

34.6%

Target DDS: less than 5%

Unemployment rate

20.4%

Target DDS: less than 5%

Youth unemployment

36.4%

DDS objective: guaranteed employment for all

Oil dependence

50% of revenue

Target for sustainable development: 20% by 2034

Transformed exports

17% (manganese)

DDS target: 70% local processing

Health insurance

Partial

DDS objective: 100% universal

Access to quality education

Unequal

DDS objective: 100% equality across the territory

Corruption (Transparency Int.)

Very high

DDS objective: near-elimination through radical transparency

Renewable energy

< 20%

Target for sustainable development: 80% by 2035

3.2 Political and social consequences

The implementation of the DDS program in Gabon would have the following political and social consequences, predictable based on precedents in other contexts and the inherent logic of the system:

  1. Structural elimination of corruption: when every budgetary decision is public, verifiable, and monitored by thousands of citizen micro-groups, corruption becomes virtually impossible to systematize. A corrupt official can no longer conceal their wrongdoing.
  2. Rebuilding citizen trust: After decades of betrayal by successive political leaders, the DDS system is giving Gabonese people a sense of control over their own destiny. This reduces passivity and political cynicism, and fosters an active civic culture.
  3. Lasting political stability: unlike violent alternations (coups d'état) or pseudo-electoral alternations, the DDS system creates structural stability, because power no longer belongs to a single person or party but to the entire people, impossible to overthrow in one fell swoop.
  4. Youth reintegration: GUMI-SV, vocational training and DDS micro-groups offer concrete prospects for the future to the 36.4% of unemployed youth, eliminating the breeding ground for radicalism and desperate criminality.
  5. Regional rebalancing: disadvantaged provinces such as Nyanga and Ngounie (57% poverty) directly benefit from the resources of the people's sovereign wealth fund, eliminating territorial inequalities which are a permanent source of social tensions.

International comparison: the example of successful sovereign wealth funds

Norway, an oil-producing country with similar natural resources per capita to Gabon, created a sovereign wealth fund in 1990 that is now worth over USD 1.7 trillion. Each Norwegian theoretically owns over USD 300,000 in this fund. In Gabon, with similar management of oil revenues since 1970, the fund would now be around USD 50 billion, or USD 21,000 per capita. This wealth does not exist because it has been plundered, squandered, and misappropriated. DDS proposes to never let this happen again.

3.3 Specific benefits for vulnerable groups

Gabonese women

Gabon has appointed women ministers, but true equality is far from being achieved. DDS guarantees:

Young Gabonese

Rural peoples

PART IV: PRACTICAL IMPLEMENTATION GUIDE

4.1 How to join DDS in Gabon today

Joining DirectDemocracyS in Gabon is simple, free, and accessible to all. Here are the concrete steps:

  1. Individual registration: any Gabonese citizen of legal age can register on the DDS online platform. The three-code system guarantees the real identity of each member, preventing the creation of fake profiles or duplicate accounts.
  2. Identity verification: The DDS system verifies the identity of each member via their unique code. This verification is both secure (protection of personal data) and irreversible (impossibility of voting twice or impersonating another).
  3. Joining or creating a microgroup: Once registered, each member can join an existing microgroup in their region or create a new one with at least two other people. Microgroups are geographical (neighborhood, village) or thematic (teachers, farmers, women from province X, etc.).
  4. Initial training: ddsAI guides each new member through initial training on DDS principles, members' rights and duties, and the use of digital direct democracy tools.
  5. Active participation: from the very first days, each member participates in the discussions and votes of their micro-group. Their voice counts as much as that of any other member, whether they are an ordinary citizen or a recognized expert.

Contact and information

To join DirectDemocracyS in Gabon and obtain all the information about the system, tools, and national program, visit the official DDS platforms. All information is available in French and the main local Gabonese languages. Membership is free and open to all Gabonese citizens regardless of gender, ethnicity, religion, region, or education level.

4.2 National roadmap for the first 10 years

Phase

Period

Key actions

Expected results

Foundation

Years 1-2

10,000 registered members. 200 microgroups. DDSAI training. Resource audit.

DDS network established in all provinces. First independent analyses published.

Growth

Years 3-4

50,000 members. 1,000 micro-groups. GUMI-S Phase 1. Reneg. contracts.

Health and basic education guaranteed. Initial contracts renegotiated. Extreme poverty reduced by 20%.

Consolidation

Years 5-7

200,000 members. GUMI-V Phase 2. Local industries. Technical universities. 3 diversification sectors.

Poverty < 15%. Unemployment < 10%. Diversification 40%. Corruption reduced by 70%.

Maturity

Years 8-10

500,000+ members. Universal GUMI-V. Consolidated sovereign wealth fund. Complete direct democracy.

Poverty < 5%. Unemployment < 5%. Gabon, an African model. HDI in the top 70 worldwide.

CONCLUSION: THE CHOICE BELONGS TO THE GABONESE PEOPLE

Gabon is at a historic crossroads. After 56 years of the Bongo dynasty, a military coup, an uncertain transition, and contested elections, the country is entering a new era whose outcome is yet to be written. Gabon's natural resources are sufficient to offer every citizen a dignified life, quality education, accessible healthcare, and a future full of hope.

The question is not whether Gabon can transform itself. The question is WHO will decide on this transformation: a handful of political leaders, military personnel, and foreign multinationals, as has been the case until now? Or the Gabonese people themselves, in all their diversity, cultural richness, and collective capacity to decide their own destiny?

DirectDemocracyS offers the Gabonese people the tools, the system, the technology, and international solidarity to choose the second path. This choice can only be made by the Gabonese themselves. DDS does not impose itself on anyone: DDS proposes, explains, trains, and supports. The rest belongs to the citizens.

DDS's final message to the Gabonese people: Your natural resources belong to you. Your country belongs to you. Your future belongs to you. No leader, no multinational corporation, no foreign power has the right to decide for you. DirectDemocracyS is here to give you the tools to exercise this fundamental right: the right to decide, together, freely, intelligently, and peacefully, what you want for yourselves and your children. The path will not always be easy. But it is your path. And you are not alone: millions of citizens around the world are walking in the same direction, with the same tools, the same values, and the same conviction that direct democracy is the only true answer to the political, economic, and social problems of our time.

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) - National Program for Gabon

Document developed using the ddsAI and allddsAI methodologies - Version 1.0 - June 2026

This document may be freely reproduced, distributed and translated provided that the source is cited and its content is not altered.

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