Chamber of Deputies (Equatorial Guinea) explained

Chamber of Deputies
Native Name:

Coa Pic:Coat of arms of Equatorial Guinea.svg
Coa Res:150px
Foundation:1968
House Type:Lower house
Leader1 Type:President
Election1:12 July 2013
Members:100 members
Structure1:Equatorial Guinean Chamber of Deputies 2022.svg
Structure1 Res:250px
Political Groups1:Government (100)
Session Res:250px

The Chamber of Deputies (Spanish; Castilian: Cámara de los Diputados; French: Chambre des députés; Portuguese: Câmara dos Deputados) is the lower house of the Parliament of Equatorial Guinea.

Although vested with considerable powers under the country's constitution, the Chamber has been dominated by the Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea since its establishment, and there is virtually no opposition to executive decisions. Indeed, there have never been more than eight opposition legislators in the body.

Electoral system

The 100 members of the Chamber are elected by closed-list proportional representation in multi-member constituencies.[1] Members serve five-year terms.

Legislative history

The first legislative body was the unicameral General Assembly of Spanish Guinea (Spanish; Castilian: Asamblea General) which was established in 1964, when Spanish Guinea was given autonomy. It was replaced by Republican Assembly (Spanish; Castilian: Asamblea de la Republica) in October 1968, which had 36 deputies elected for five-year terms. Additionally there was Republican Council - Senate (Spanish; Castilian: Consejo de la Republica). Mba Ada was the first president of the Senate. Senate ceased to exist in 1973 when most of the senators fled the country or were murdered. By 1974, four or every five deputies of the earlier Republican Assembly had been murdered.[2]

The Republican Assembly was replaced by Popular National Assembly (Spanish; Castilian: Asamblea Nacional Popular) in the Constitution of 1973. It had 60 deputies effectively selected by PUNT, the single party allowed to operate. The legislature was dissolved in 1979.

A unicameral House of Representatives of the People (Spanish; Castilian: Cámara de los Representantes del Pueblo) started to function in 1983. All members needed to swore loyalty to Obiang Nguema.

In 2013, bicameralism was introduced with a Senate, and the House of Representatives of the People became the lower chamber as Chamber of Deputies.

Presidents of the Legislatures

NameTook officeLeft officeNotes
Enrique Gori Molubela1964June 1965Of General Assembly
Federico NgomoJune 19651968Of General Assembly
Pastor Torao Sikara16 October 19685 March 1969Of National Assembly[3]
?1969August 1979Of National Assembly
Legislature dissolvedAugust 19791983
Francisco Bodien Ngalo1983November 1993[4]
Felipe Ondo Obiang21 November 1993November 1994[5] [6]
Marcelino Nguema OngueneNovember 19941999[7] [8]
Salomón Nguema Owono199918 June 2008
Ángel Serafín Seriche Dougan18 June 200812 July 2013[9]
Gaudencio Mohaba Mesu12 July 2013Incumbent[10]

Last elections

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea1000
Total1000
align=left colspan=5Source: Government of Equatorial Guinea

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Equatorial Guinea: Electoral System. IPU. n.d.. dead. 2003-03-19. https://web.archive.org/web/20030319124430/http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/2101_B.htm.
  2. Book: Liniger-Goumaz . Max . Historical dictionary of Equatorial Guinea . 2000 . Scarecrow press . Lanham (Md) London . 0-8108-3394-8 . 3rd.
  3. Web site: A Guinea Ecuatorial. 1968. live. 2015-06-15. https://web.archive.org/web/20150615025530/http://www.bioko.net/guineaespanola/1968/19681011_01.pdf.
  4. Web site: Francisco Bodien Ngalo, ex presidente del Parlamento de Guinea Ecuatorial . El País . es . 31 August 1995.
  5. Web site: Equatorial Guinea Post-election human rights violations. 1996. RefWorld. live. 2017-10-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20171014204043/https://www.refworld.org/pdfid/3ae6a9b50.pdf.
  6. Book: Juan Balboa. Boneke. Fermín Nguema. Esono. [{{Google books|488uAQAAIAAJ|plainurl=yes}} La transición de Guinea Ecuatorial: historia de un fracaso]. 1998 . 9788488070098. Labrys 54 Ediciones.
  7. Book: Inter-parliamentary Union. [{{Google books|CU_pDi1UDDcC|plainurl=yes}} Parlements]. 1999. fr.
  8. Book: Inter-parliamentary Union. [{{Google books|p8Qs4DLCOGMC|plainurl=yes}} Parlements]. 1999. fr.
  9. Web site: EQUATORIAL GUINEA Cámara de los Representantes del Pueblo (House of Peoples' Representatives). 2008. IPU.
  10. Web site: EQUATORIAL GUINEA Cámara de los Diputados (Chamber of Deputies). IPU.