Background
Gakosso, an ethnic Mbochi, was born in Inkouélé, located in the Gamboma District of Plateaux Region, and studied at the Sorbonne in France.
Gakosso, an ethnic Mbochi, was born in Inkouélé, located in the Gamboma District of Plateaux Region, and studied at the Sorbonne in France.
Panthéon-Assas University. Saint St. Petersburg State University.
Previously he was Minister of Culture and the Arts from 2002 to 2015. He was a lecturer on journalism at the Marien Ngouabi University in Brazzaville, and in 1995 he criticized a press law passed by the National Assembly, accusing the government of "working to restrict press freedom". After the June–October 1997 civil war, he was Adviser for Communication, Posts, and Telecommunications to President Denis Sassou Nguesso from 1997 to 2002.
On 18 August 2002, he was appointed to the government as Minister of Culture, Arts, and Tourism.
He succeeded Mambou Aimée Gnali at the head of that ministry on 22 August. In a ceremony at the Marien Ngouabi Mausoleum, Gakosso rekindled the eternal flame commemorating President Marien Ngouabi on 11 November 2002.
The flame had been extinguished since the 1997 war. Speaking on the occasion, Gakosso said that he had prioritized the restoration of the flame when he took over as Minister of Culture because "it symbolizes the pain, resistance, self-sacrifice, and courage embodied by President Marien Ngouabi." At the time of the fifth Panafrican Music Festival in Brazzaville in July 2005, Gakosso was President of the Festival"s Steering Committee.
While serving as Minister of Culture, Gakosso also served for a time as Interim Minister of Communication and Relations with Parliament, as well as Government Spokesman.
His portfolio was reduced in scope on 3 March 2007, when he was appointed as Minister of Culture and the Arts. In the June 2007 parliamentary election, Gakosso stood as the Congolese Labour Party (PCT) candidate in the Ongogni constituency of Plateaux Region. He replaced Pierre Ngollo as the PCT candidate.
Although there were rumors of rivalry between the two, Gakosso and Ngollo appeared together when Gakosso announced his candidacy, and Ngollo instead stood as the PCT candidate in the Ouenzé I constituency of Brazzaville.
Following the election, he retained his post as Minister of Culture and the Arts in the government appointed on 30 December 2007. Prior to the July 2009 presidential election, Gakosso was Rapporteur of the National Initiative for Peace (International Projects), a political association promoting Sassou Nguesso"s re-election while stressing the importance of peace.
He was retained as Minister of Culture and the Arts in the government named after the election, on 25 September 2012. On 10 August 2015, Gakosso was moved to the post of Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation.
Gakosso formally succeeded Ikouébé at a ceremony on 25 August 2015.
Describing the Foreign Ministry as "the iconic symbol of our sovereignty in the concert of nations" and "the refuge of our dignity in the face of the other peoples of the world", he vowed that in "the best Congolese diplomatic traditions in the service of peace, neighborliness, cooperation and development" he would "continue to promote our country in the world". Gakosso met with Russia"s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sergei Lavrov, in Moscow on 3 November 2015, and the two reaffirmed the good relations between their countries. Lavrov expressed support for the outcome of Congo-Brazzaville"s October 2015 constitutional referendum, which paved the way for Sassou Nguesso to run for another term as President.