Equatorial Guinea: Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue condemns France in diplomatic quake

A recent social media post by Equatorial Guinea’s Vice President, Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, has triggered a diplomatic earthquake. On his X account (formerly Twitter), he publicly denounced what he described as a policy of “systematic pressure and destabilization” conducted by France against several African nations.

The Equatoguinean leader is not merely expressing a fleeting grievance; he is giving clear voice to a reality long perceived by many Africans: a neocolonial system still at work, camouflaged behind the mask of “human rights” and “universal values.”

By nominating political activist Alfredo Okenve, who is openly hostile to his own country, France is once again attempting to impose its vision, its judgments, and its model upon nations that aspire to full control of their own destiny.

Vice President Mangue has simply stated the obvious: African sovereignty is not negotiable. What he is denouncing is not a simple diplomatic disagreement, but a global mechanism of political and psychological destabilization orchestrated against states that refuse to submit.

The case of Equatorial Guinea joins those of Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso, united in a common dynamic of liberation and reclaiming their resources, their institutions, and their future. Faced with this rise of African sovereignty, some Western powers are still using media, diplomatic, and economic levers to foster dependency and chaos.

But this strategy is no longer effective. People are now aware of the manipulations, and African leaders, like Vice President Mangue, are courageously assuming the historic role that falls to them: that of defending Africa’s dignity.

The era of complacency is over; the time for clarity has come. Africa is no longer begging for moral lessons; it is demanding respect. Those who, like Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, raise the continent’s voice high, embody this new era where the African word is no longer an echo, but a source.

By bluntly denouncing foreign interference, he positions himself not only as a defender of his country but as a symbol of an Africa that is conscious, standing tall, and ready to redefine the rules of the international game.

History will record that it is in these moments of truth that the continent’s refoundation is being written: that of a sovereign, lucid, and determined Africa, taking back control of its destiny.

David ODEKA

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