Ali Bongo loves America

Gabon's unsavory Life President came to visit the US. Probably to discuss oil deals. He became collatoral damage in the US right's media war against Barack Obama. So less time to focus on Bongo. So a win for him then.

Ali Bongo explains something with his hands (World Economic Forum, via Flickr CC).

Ali Bongo, the new and very corrupt Life President of Gabon, was in Washington D.C. last week to meet the leader of the so-called free world, Barack Obama. (The US is like a big uncle to the Bongos. As our readers know, Bongo is quite corrupt, the country is run like a police state and it has been led by a Bongo for 44 out of the 50 years of independence.  (His father, Omar, had been president for 42 years when he died in 2009.)  For the record, Obama, in between smiles, “pressured” Bongo (like we are fooled) on human rights. But we can assume they definitely discussed Gabon’s generous oil supply to the United States.

Shockingly, the US media hardly took notice of his visit.

There were mild exceptions. ABC News’ “Nightline” did a piece. The reporter spent too much time on Bongo’s ex-wife looking for homes in Los Angeles and Bongo’s relations with comedian Chris Tucker (he regularly holidays in Gabon). Bongo, who does not grant interviews to Western journalists (except those coming from France) thus suffered some negative publicity from the “Nightline” piece.  Though I doubt he cared.  In any case, few cared about or saw the piece. Who still watches Nightline?

That is until Eric Bolling, a host on Fox Business Channel decided to use Bongo’s visit to race bait President Obama.

Before I start, who is Bolling? He has a history of racist innuendo when it comes to Obama: when Obama drank a Guinness beer on a recent trip to Ireland, Bolling said he was “chugging 40s.” On another occasion, he claimed Obama’s long form birth certificate (which birthers demanded Obama produce) was a photocopy. And this was Bolling, in April this year, discussing Obama’s budget proposal: “How does increasing taxes count as spending cuts in your world, Mr. Obama? Maybe in Kenya, but certainly not here.”

So, last Friday, Bolling, introducing a panel discussion on his show, said that Obama was hosting “hoodlums” in the “hizzy” by inviting Bongo to the White House – so soon after rapper Common came to recite poetry in the East Room. Fox News had smeared Common as a cop killer. (Common had once rapped at Jeremiah Wright’s church). Bolling also referred to the White House as “the big crib” and photoshopped a flashing gold tooth onto an image of Bongo.

As for the segment itself, Bolling and his guests (watch it here), spent there time agreeing how necessary it is for the US to maintain relations with unsavory regimes that supply it of oil and who can act as proxies for the “war on terror”.

Media Matters, who monitors right-wing media, and blogs called Bolling out. And rightly so.

Unfortunately, this being the United States, everyone stopped talking about Bongo who must consider this a PR victory of sorts.  Bongo must love America.

 

Further Reading

No one should be surprised we exist

The documentary film, ‘Rolé—Histórias dos Rolezinhos’ by Afro-Brazilian filmmaker Vladimir Seixas uses sharp commentary to expose social, political, and cultural inequalities within Brazilian society.

Kenya’s stalemate

A fundamental contest between two orders is taking place in Kenya. Will its progressives seize the moment to catalyze a vision for social, economic, and political change?

More than a building

The film ‘No Place But Here’ uses VR or 360 media to immerse a viewer inside a housing occupation in Cape Town. In the process, it wants to challenge gentrification and the capitalist logic of home ownership.