Kehinde Adegoke | OCCRP
For decades, Gabon’s Bongo dynasty has been synonymous with wealth and controversy. Now, a new investigation by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) exposes how Fabrice Albert Andjoua Ondimba Bongo — son of late President Omar Bongo and Constitutional Court president Marie‑Madeleine Mborantsuo — quietly amassed a fortune while serving as Gabon’s Director General of the Budget.
Between 2020 and 2023, Andjoua snapped up 43 luxury apartments in Dubai worth about $15 million, many clustered in the elite Sobha Creek Vistas Tower. Even after selling some, reporters confirmed he still owns ten properties in Golf Town. At the same time, he and his mother founded a French real estate firm that controls a mansion in Bougival, near Paris.
The scale of his holdings dwarfs official earnings. A 2015 decree shows Gabon’s top civil servants earn barely $1,900 a month — a figure that makes Andjoua’s empire impossible to justify on salary alone.
His appetite for extravagance extended beyond real estate. In October 2023, shipping records revealed he imported a Brabus GLE900 Rocket SUV worth over $400,000 from Belgium to Libreville — one of only 25 ever made.
Meanwhile, Luxembourg authorities have opened a judicial inquiry into companies linked to him, probing allegations of forgery, tax fraud, and money laundering. Though not formally named as a suspect, Andjoua co‑owned firms structured to hold property and vehicles abroad.
The revelations echo the long‑running “ill‑got gains” case in France, where eight of his half‑siblings face charges of embezzlement and corruption. Andjoua himself has not been indicted, but his paper trail — spanning Dubai, France, Luxembourg, and even Las Vegas — paints the portrait of a public official living far beyond his means.
In a country where one‑third of citizens live in poverty, Andjoua’s secret empire underscores a painful truth: Gabon’s ruling elite continue to thrive while ordinary people are left behind.

