Société de presse et d’édition du Gabon
Quick facts
SONAPRESSE — L’Union
Typology trajectory
SONAPRESSE — L’Union · 2022 — 2026
SC = State Controlled Media. Dashed boxes indicate years before the outlet entered the dataset. See the State Media Matrix typology for definitions.
SONAPRESSE publishes L’Union, Gabon’s only national daily newspaper and one of the country’s most prominent print titles, described by its own site as “le quotidien officiel du Gabon.” L’Union was founded in 1973, is published six times a week (Monday to Saturday), and reports a daily print run of around 25,000 copies distributed nationally. SONAPRESSE is headquartered in Libreville and forms part of the wider GIE Ediprint group, which links SONAPRESSE, the printer Multipress-Gabon and Edig.
Media assets
Publishing: L’Union
Ownership and governance
L’Union was founded in 1973 by Fred Hidalgo; historical accounts also credit Mauricette Hidalgo with the title’s conception and early operation. Its first official issues appeared as a weekly from 15 March 1974, and the title was transformed into a daily on 30 December 1975. Historically, SONAPRESSE was linked to the French group France Éditions et Publications (Hachette), with the Hidalgos directing the early operation before leaving Gabon in 1976; Albert Yangari was subsequently named director of the newsroom and then Director General. As the French-language record of the title notes, L’Union was considered strongly pro-government, particularly through the long presidency of Omar Bongo Ondimba. The current Director of Publication and of the newsroom is Lin Joël Ndembet; the precise current ownership and control structure of SONAPRESSE is not publicly documented in registry or government sources identified.
SONAPRESSE operates within the orbit of the Ministry of Communication and Media, led by Germain Biahodjow, appointed Minister in the government formed on 1 January 2026. Gabon’s political system is dominated by President Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema, who took power in the coup d’état of 30 August 2023, won the presidential election of 12 April 2025, and presides over a presidential system established by the new constitution adopted by referendum in November 2024. SONAPRESSE has reported that the post-election violence of 31 August 2016 negatively affected its activity, after which the company and its affiliated printing operation undertook a substantial modernisation programme.
Source of funding and budget
SONAPRESSE appears to operate with commercial revenue from newspaper sales, advertising, and the activities of its affiliated printing and distribution operations; no public audited accounts or state-subsidy breakdown were identified, and the specific basis of any state control over the company is not publicly documented. The wider Ediprint and Multipress ecosystem has invested heavily in modernisation: L’Union reports that Multipress-Gabon invested more than XAF 8 billion in recent years to modernise its printing capacity, including colour printing, alongside investment in digital distribution. SONAPRESSE does not publish a detailed breakdown of its revenue.
Editorial independence
L’Union has historically functioned as Gabon’s quasi-official newspaper. As reflected in the public record of the title, it was considered strongly pro-government throughout the Bongo era, though it offered more balanced coverage of the 2009 election campaign following the death of President Omar Bongo Ondimba. State Media Monitor review indicates that the paper’s coverage remains closely aligned with the government’s communication agenda. No statutory editorial-independence guarantee, autonomous governing mechanism, or effective independent oversight body protecting the paper’s editorial autonomy was identified.
AI and digital policy
SONAPRESSE maintains a digital presence through the union.sonapresse.com portal and distributes digital editions of L’Union and other Gabonese titles through the e-kiosque Sodipresse platform. The company’s modernisation programme has included investment in digital distribution alongside colour printing.
No publicly available SONAPRESSE policy on AI-generated content, synthetic-media disclosure, or content provenance frameworks such as C2PA was identified. Gabon’s media-regulatory framework does not currently include sector-specific provisions governing AI-generated content, deepfakes, or synthetic-media authentication standards.
May 2026
Citation (cite the article/profile as part of):
Dragomir, M. (2025). State Media Monitor Global Dataset 2025.
Media and Journalism Research Center (MJRC).
Zenodo.
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17219015
This article/profile is part of the State Media Monitor Global Dataset 2025, a continuously updated dataset published by the Media and Journalism Research Center (MJRC).
