The government of Equatorial Guinea has resigned en masse following a failure to meet key economic and governance benchmarks set by international lenders. The development was confirmed by the presidency in Malabo early on Tuesday, as the oil-dependent nation grapples with dwindling revenues and mounting debts.
President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo accepted the resignation of Prime Minister Francisco Pascual Obama Asue and his entire cabinet, according to a statement released by the office of the presidency. The move pre-empted a scheduled review by the International Monetary Fund, which had flagged persistent shortfalls in transparency and fiscal discipline.
Equatorial Guinea, sub-Saharan Africa’s third-largest oil producer, has seen its economy contract sharply since the global oil price slump of 2014. With production declining and reserves dwindling, the government has struggled to diversify its economy or improve living standards for its 1.3 million citizens. The latest IMF assessment, published in April, cited “significant deviations” from the authorities’ reform programme.
The resignation places the UK’s development aid programme under scrutiny. Britain has allocated approximately £12 million in bilateral assistance to Equatorial Guinea over the past five years, much of it channelled through multilateral organisations. A spokesman for the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said officials were “closely monitoring the situation” and noted that future disbursements would be contingent on “credible progress” on governance reforms.
Development analysts have long questioned the efficacy of aid to Equatorial Guinea, where per capita GDP exceeds $10,000 but poverty rates remain high. Transparency International ranks the country among the most corrupt in the world. The opposition has accused the Obiang regime of siphoning public funds into personal accounts and luxury assets abroad.
Political instability in Equatorial Guinea carries regional implications. The country holds Africa’s third-largest proven oil reserves and is a key supplier to Asian markets. Any disruption to production could affect global energy prices, though analysts at Eurasia Group downplayed this risk, noting that output is already in steady decline.
A caretaker administration will be appointed within days, according to the presidency. Fresh parliamentary elections are expected to be called, but no date has been set. The president, who has held power since 1979, has never lost an election and is widely expected to retain effective control.
The UK’s aid assessment will be completed by the end of the third quarter, the FCDO spokesman confirmed. The outcome will depend on the formation of a credible transition government and its commitment to the IMF programme. Without external support, Equatorial Guinea faces a looming debt crisis, with total external liabilities estimated at $1.2 billion.
For now, the resignation marks a rare moment of political accountability in a country better known for its opaque governance. Whether it leads to genuine reform or merely a reshuffling of loyalists remains to be seen.








