Gabon’s government has suspended the election process for the presidency of the Gabonese Football Federation, FEGAFOOT. That move has pushed the story beyond local football politics and into a wider governance dispute. Sports minister Paul Ulrich Kessany Zategwa announced the decision on Monday. He said the order also covers the electoral process at Gabon’s national Olympic committee.

Why Gabon acted
The government says it wants to clean up sports administration. Officials plan to give sports associations six months to regularize their records and structure. The report also said the sports ministry and interior ministry will work together through a joint compliance mechanism.
That is Gabon’s official case. But football’s concern is different. Once a government stops a federation election, the issue quickly shifts to independence and control. Reports have it that FIFA, CAF, and the IOC have all received formal notice. Gabon now waits for their response.
Why the FIFA angle matters
The timing makes the decision more serious. Just days before the suspension, FEGAFOOT planned to hold the election on April 18 in Mouila. The same report said FIFA and CAF experts were expected to attend and supervise the vote. That means the process was already active when the government stepped in.

FIFA has taken a hard line in similar cases. In February 2025, FIFA suspended Congo’s football federation, FECOFOOT, over what it called undue third-party interference. The ban blocked Congo from international football until officials restored control of federation facilities to the recognised leadership. FIFA later lifted the suspension after those conditions were met.
That does not mean Gabon will face the same punishment. But it does show the level of risk. Gabon says it is enforcing order. FIFA will judge whether the suspension protects the process or crosses into interference. That is now the core question.
What comes next
The next move belongs to FIFA and CAF. No sanction has been announced. No final ruling has been made. For now, the safest reading is simple: Gabon has halted the FEGAFOOT election, the international authorities have been notified, and the case now sits in a sensitive zone where reform and interference may collide.
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