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Gabon Presidential Flags
Last modified: 2025-08-16 by bruce berry
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by Hemendra Bhola/Messer Woland, 26 Dec 2016
by Zoltan Horvath, 4 June 2024
See also:
Current Presidential Flag (2016 )
Images
of a new Presidential flag of Gabon can be seen
here and
here.
Hemendra Bhola, 26 December 2016
The new
Presidential flag differs from both previous versions. The original Presidential
flag (19601990) was a
banner of the national arms (and Gabon is one of a few countries to
have an actual heraldic coat-of-arms as its national emblem), while the post-1990
Presidential flag was the national
tricolor with the full Coat of Arms on a white roundel. The current
Presidential flag (adopted in August 2016 after general elections) is once again
of a; completely different design, although retaining the national arms. Curiously, the ratio of
seems to have ever increased from being a square (1:1) to 3:4 to 3:5.
According to Hemendra Bhola's interpretation of the available imagery,
the current presidential flag of Gabon is darker blue with the full
achievement of the national arms centered on its rectangular 3:5 area,
with each of the four corners of the flag bearing a triangular patch in the
colours of national flag at 45° angles (and *not*
orthogonally to the flag's diagonals) and orientated outwards yielding a
green triangle on each corner, and stacked symmetrical trapezes of
yellow and medium blue adjoined to them.
Interesting to note the two different shades of blue
found on the flag, suggesting that the “presidential blue” and the “national
flag blue” are distinct, which in turn suggests that the
national flag should never be rendered with too dark a shade of blue.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 26 December 2016
Based on pictures I found, the national colors are not placed in all corners. My assumption is that the national colors
are in the top left corner only. Most of the pictures show this flag with the same proportions as the national flag (2:3
version):
https://icesco.org/en/2021/10/07/president-of-gabonese-republic-receives-icesco-director-general-at-presidential-palace-in-libreville
https://theprint.in/world/vice-president-m-venkaiah-naidu-meets-gabon-president-in-libreville/978126
https://www.flickr.com/photos/statephotos/52054373933
https://humanglemedia.com/covid19-gabon-president-tells-countrymen-to-brace-up-for-stricter-protocols
http://eng.chinamil.com.cn/CHINA_209163/TopStories_209189/7952675.html
https://www.gabonreview.com/discours-du-17-aout-a-la-nation-ali-bongo-mise-sur-le-social-et-la-mobilisation-electorale
https://www.agencequateur.com/?p=7641
http://news.abangui.com/h/78299.html
There is a picture taken in 2015 with a different version of the Presidential Flag (scroll down):
https://legabonemergent.over-blog.com/2015/...
Zoltan Horvath, 4 June 2024
Presidential Flag (19902016)
image by
Željko Heimer
Proportions: 3:4
Source: Smith (1982) [smi82]
The Presidential Flag of Gabon
used after 1990 was the national tricolour with white disk with the coat of arms in the middle.
Before that a square flag being banner of arms was used, as shown, in Smith (1982)
[smi82].
Željko Heimer, 2 October 2001
Presidential Flag (19601990)
Image by Željko Heimer
Ratio: 1:1
Source: Smith (1982) [smi82]
The initial President's Flag was a square banner of arms as shown in Smith
(1982)
[smi82].
Željko Heimer, 2 October 2001
It was asked why the Gabonese President's Standard changed in the 1990s
despite there being
no change in the President. A possible answer is political. In June 1990, the
16th French-African summit took place in La Baule. Francoise Mitterrand, then
president of France, gave a famous speech in which he urgently asked for more democracy
in the African countries. It was not only a call but also a threat, which can
be summed up as: "There cannot be democracy without development, but
there cannot be development without democracy" (i.e. no more funds and
military help from France if there is no progress towards democracy). In
Gabon, a National Conference gathered from 27 March to
19 April 1990 and recommended multi-party democracy to then President Bongo.
Bongo had to abandon some of his
personal powers and it is possible that this modification of the president's
status was reflected by a modification of his standard.
Ivan Sache, 6 October 2001