How Africa’s longest-serving ruler led his nation from terror to oil
Tiny, oil-rich Equatorial Guinea goes to the polls Sunday in an election that is expected to return President Teodoro Obiang Nguema for another seven years
Equatorial Guinea’s tough President Teodoro Obiang Nguema seized power almost 37 years ago from a feared and ruthless uncle and has steered the tiny but now oil-rich nation with an iron glove.
Already Africa’s longest-serving leader, the 73-year-old looks set to win a fresh seven-year mandate in elections Sunday.
“I am the candidate of the people. Whoever does not vote for me is rejecting peace and opting for disorder,” Obiang told a scattered crowd at a campaign rally at the Malabo stadium.
Obiang came to power in the former Spanish colony in a 1979 coup against his uncle Macias Nguema, a fervent nationalist who found a tropical outlet for the ruthless methods of Spanish dictator General Francisco Franco after independence in 1968.
