• Jean-Luc Mandaba (15 August 1943 – 22 October 2000) was Prime Minister of the Central African Republic from 25 October 1993 to 12 April 1995 under President...
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  • French politician Jean-Luc Dehaene (1940–2014), a Flemish politician Jean-Luc Laurent (born 1957), a French politician Jean-Luc Mandaba (1943–2000), a former...
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  • Thumbnail for Ange-Félix Patassé
    increasingly unpopular. In 2000, he may have had his former prime-minister Jean-Luc Mandaba and his son poisoned on suspicion of planning a coup.[citation needed]...
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  • Lakoué, Prime minister (1993) Jean-Luc Mandaba, Prime minister (1993–1995) Gabriel Koyambounou, Prime minister (1995–1996) Jean-Paul Ngoupandé, Prime minister...
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  • misuse of public funds on 6 December 2004. After MLPC first vice-president Luc Dondon Apollinaire Konamabaye was suspended from his duties, Koyambounou...
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  • It subsequently joined the coalition government led by the MLPC's Jean-Luc Mandaba. In the next parliamentary elections in 1998 the RDC was part of the...
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  • Thumbnail for List of heads of government of the Central African Republic
    was removed as prime minister and replaced by Lakoué. K In April 1995, Mandaba resigned as prime minister, preempting a threatened vote of no-confidence...
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  • Koyambounou Enoch Derant Lakoué Jean-Pierre Lebouder Henri Maïdou Timothée Malendoma Jean-Luc Mandaba Charles Massi Jean-Paul Ngoupandé Ange-Félix Patassé...
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  • Fred Pratt Green, 97, British Methodist minister and hymn writer. Jean-Luc Mandaba, 57, Prime Minister of the Central African Republic, heart attack....
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  • Thumbnail for Movement for Democracy and Development (Central African Republic)
    elections the group became part of a coalition government headed by Jean-Luc Mandaba of the Movement for the Liberation of the Central African People (MLPC)...
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  • and was promoted to director of industry on 1 February 1969. President Jean-Bedel Bokassa named Lakoué minister of transportation on 25 June 1970. He...
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  • presidential election, Massi joined the government of Prime Minister Jean-Luc Mandaba as Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources in October 1993, remaining...
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  • Thumbnail for Liberal Democratic Party (Central African Republic)
    Following the elections it became part of a coalition government headed by Jean-Luc Mandaba of the Movement for the Liberation of the Central African People (MLPC)...
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  • Thumbnail for Célestin Gaombalet
    the National Assembly on June 7, 2005, receiving 78 votes against 18 for Luc Apollinaire Dondon Konamabaye, who had previously held the position under...
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  • Thumbnail for Alliance for Democracy and Progress (Central African Republic)
    in the National Assembly in the 1993 general elections, and joined Jean-Luc Mandaba's coalition government. In the next parliamentary elections in 1998...
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