Gabon election: Justice minister quits over disputed result Published duration 5 September 2016

image copyright AFP/Getty image caption "Bongo - go!" - supporters of opposition candidate Jean Ping demonstrate against the election result in Paris

Gabonese Justice Minister Seraphim Moundounga has resigned in protest over the disputed presidential election.

He is reported to have warned the incumbent, Ali Bongo, that he could cancel the results of the election if they did not "tally with reality".

Mr Bongo was declared the winner by a narrow margin last Wednesday, but the opposition say the poll was fraudulent.

His rival Jean Ping has called for a general strike and says dozens of his supporters have been killed.

Mr Moundounga is the first senior government minister to resign over the election result.

The Gabonese authorities say three people have died and 105 have been injured following violent clashes and mass arrests that have taken place since the election result was announced.

Other reports put the death toll at at least six.

image copyright AFP/Getty image caption Violence since the election result was declared has claimed several lives

There have been more than 800 arrests and France says several people with dual French-Gabonese citizenship remain unaccounted for.

The official election result gave Mr Bongo a second seven-year term with 49.8% of the vote to Mr Ping's 48.2% - a margin of 5,594 votes.

Mr Ping won in six out of nine provinces but disputes the result in Mr Bongo's home province of Haut-Ogooue, where turnout was 99.93% and 95% of votes were for the president.

Turnout in the other provinces was between 45% and 71%, according to Gabon's interior ministry

The former African Union diplomat has called for a recount, which has so far been resisted by the government.

Oil-rich Gabon has one of the highest per-capita incomes in Africa, but few of its 1.6 million people feel the benefit.

Gabon election: Bongo v Ping

image copyright Getty Images

Mr Bongo took office in 2009 after an election marred by violence

He succeeding his father Omar Bongo who had come to power in 1967 and was Africa's longest serving leader

Veteran diplomat Mr Ping had served as chair of the African Union

He had been a close ally of Omar Bongo and had been his foreign minister

He had two children with Omar Bongo's daughter, Pascaline