Independence Day of Gabon, August 17

WAELE AFRICA Foundation Wishes to congratulate the government and people of Republic of Gabon 🇬🇦 on the occasion of her National Day and 64 independence. We wish your country and all its people happiness, continued success and prosperity.

Independence Day is a public holiday in Republic of Gabon 🇬🇦 and commemorate on 17th August Each year as National Day. The country gained its independence from France on this day in 1960.

The Commonwealth Chambers of Commerce mentions: “This holiday is widely celebrated throughout the country and festivities usually last for two days. Celebrations comprise official speeches, parades, drum shows, traditional dance and fireworks at La Place de Fetes. Friends and family gather together to enjoy traditional food such as nyembwe, fufu and Atanga with bread.”

Gabon Independence Day is a day of great significance for the Gabonese people. It is a day to celebrate their freedom and unity and to reflect on the country's past and look forward to its future. 

History of Gabonese Independence Day

The first Europeans to visit Gabon were the Portuguese in the late fifteenth century when Diego Cam explored the region. They gave Gabon its name when they named the mouth of the Como River as gabão, Portuguese for "cloak", after the shape of the estuary.

The French arrived in the region in the early nineteenth attracted by the slave trade. In 1839, local rulers in the coastal region signed away sovereignty to the French. The French explorer Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza led his first mission to the Gabon-Congo area in 1875 increasing French control and founded the town of Franceville in 1880. France officially occupied Gabon in 1885 and in 1910, Gabon became one of the four colonies of French Equatorial Africa.

During the Fourth French Republic (1946–58), Gabon became an overseas territory with its own assembly and representation in the French Parliament. In 1958 Gabon voted to become an autonomous republic within the French Community.

On August 17th 1960, Gabon gained its independence and became an independent republic joining the other three territories of the French Equatorial Union who also gained their independence in the same month.

The first president of Gabon, elected in 1961, was Léon M'ba.

After the nation gained independence, France established a new dynamic with Gabon partly motivated by the West African nation's uranium wealth which was key to France's nuclear programme.

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