The Prague Post - G.Bissau rocked by coup, president's arrest

EUR -
AED 4.308829
AFN 77.560187
ALL 96.750336
AMD 447.773964
ANG 2.100622
AOA 1075.886522
ARS 1702.990965
AUD 1.758998
AWG 2.114815
AZN 2.004081
BAM 1.954788
BBD 2.364786
BDT 143.585682
BGN 1.955482
BHD 0.442286
BIF 3473.417015
BMD 1.173268
BND 1.509425
BOB 8.130896
BRL 6.47116
BSD 1.174097
BTN 105.682751
BWP 15.416087
BYN 3.449144
BYR 22996.047598
BZD 2.361388
CAD 1.610374
CDF 2540.124118
CHF 0.931064
CLF 0.026921
CLP 1056.105444
CNY 8.20865
CNH 8.185936
COP 4423.172429
CRC 583.20063
CUC 1.173268
CUP 31.091595
CVE 110.209366
CZK 24.153948
DJF 208.513707
DKK 7.469221
DOP 74.022003
DZD 152.014624
EGP 55.974022
ERN 17.599016
ETB 182.216464
FJD 2.667192
FKP 0.870542
GBP 0.872477
GEL 3.16194
GGP 0.870542
GHS 12.328776
GIP 0.870542
GMD 86.822267
GNF 10271.727285
GTQ 9.005454
GYD 245.645998
HKD 9.132634
HNL 30.954111
HRK 7.525925
HTG 153.661122
HUF 384.503414
IDR 19586.531561
ILS 3.739069
IMP 0.870542
INR 105.57873
IQD 1538.110452
IRR 49423.903334
ISK 147.209835
JEP 0.870542
JMD 186.584222
JOD 0.831874
JPY 184.057538
KES 151.457354
KGS 102.594636
KHR 4704.585028
KMF 492.772752
KPW 1055.992484
KRW 1694.949092
KWD 0.361003
KYD 0.978498
KZT 595.314411
LAK 25381.970849
LBP 105144.175152
LKR 363.573369
LRD 208.992719
LSL 19.435606
LTL 3.464354
LVL 0.709698
LYD 6.358736
MAD 10.706495
MDL 19.76094
MGA 5389.233582
MKD 61.54675
MMK 2463.670366
MNT 4175.779359
MOP 9.414167
MRU 46.624067
MUR 54.263969
MVR 18.126821
MWK 2035.954897
MXN 21.145634
MYR 4.761092
MZN 74.983597
NAD 19.435523
NGN 1695.80595
NIO 43.20782
NOK 11.835678
NPR 169.092201
NZD 2.039521
OMR 0.45112
PAB 1.174107
PEN 3.949256
PGK 5.001433
PHP 69.080245
PKR 328.787126
PLN 4.219421
PYG 7708.043284
QAR 4.270844
RON 5.092922
RSD 117.279692
RUB 92.805098
RWF 1710.721847
SAR 4.400342
SBD 9.546681
SCR 16.211094
SDG 705.645923
SEK 10.825788
SGD 1.509597
SHP 0.880255
SLE 28.217243
SLL 24602.84206
SOS 669.856147
SRD 44.732585
STD 24284.273288
STN 24.48743
SVC 10.273726
SYP 12975.34337
SZL 19.430026
THB 36.94388
TJS 10.843134
TMT 4.11817
TND 3.423772
TOP 2.824948
TRY 50.398535
TTD 7.980903
TWD 36.822422
TZS 2898.342043
UAH 49.674501
UGX 4250.854169
USD 1.173268
UYU 45.976595
UZS 14094.764832
VES 349.364455
VND 30856.94142
VUV 141.665375
WST 3.25732
XAF 655.620455
XAG 0.016354
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.170815
XCG 2.116114
XDR 0.815381
XOF 655.620455
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.765626
ZAR 19.441269
ZMK 10560.85643
ZMW 26.036635
ZWL 377.791732
  • RBGPF

    -0.3000

    80.75

    -0.37%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    23.15

    +0.09%

  • GSK

    -0.2600

    49.04

    -0.53%

  • CMSC

    -0.0334

    22.65

    -0.15%

  • BP

    -0.0200

    34.73

    -0.06%

  • AZN

    -0.5800

    91.93

    -0.63%

  • RIO

    -0.4900

    80.03

    -0.61%

  • NGG

    -0.4200

    77.35

    -0.54%

  • RELX

    -0.6900

    40.42

    -1.71%

  • BTI

    0.0700

    56.62

    +0.12%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    23.82

    +1.05%

  • BCC

    -0.1900

    73.6

    -0.26%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.61

    +0.22%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    13.21

    -0.15%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    15.51

    +0.13%

G.Bissau rocked by coup, president's arrest
G.Bissau rocked by coup, president's arrest / Photo: Patrick MEINHARDT - AFP

G.Bissau rocked by coup, president's arrest

Military officials in Guinea-Bissau said they had seized "total control" of the coup-prone west African country Wednesday, arresting its president, closing its borders and suspending its electoral process three days after general elections.

Text size:

Heavy gunfire rang out near the presidential palace earlier in the day, with men in military uniform taking over the main road leading to the building.

In the early afternoon, General Denis N'Canha, head of the presidential military office, told journalists that a command "composed of all branches of the armed forces" was assuming control of the country "until further notice".

He read the announcement seated at a table and surrounded by armed soldiers.

President Umaro Sissoco Embalo, who had been favoured to win re-election in last Sunday's polls, was arrested and being held at general-staff headquarters where he was being "well-treated", a military source told AFP.

A senior officer who also confirmed the arrest added that Embalo had been detained along "with the chief of staff and the minister of the interior".

Opposition leader Domingos Simoes Pereira, who was barred from last weekend's presidential election by the Supreme Court, was also arrested Wednesday, according to two sources close to him.

Unable to run, Pereira cast his support behind opposition candidate Fernando Dias. He and Embalo had both already declared victory in the presidential race, with official provisional results expected Thursday.

Guinea-Bissau has experienced four coups since independence, as well as multiple attempted coups.

Political stability was one of the major issues in the election, given the nation's turbulent past. In October the country's army said it thwarted an "attempt to subvert the constitutional order" and arrested several senior military officers.

- Curfew and closed borders -

N'Canha, in his declaration Wednesday, claimed a plan had been uncovered to destabilise Guinea-Bissau "involving national drug lords", which had included "the introduction of weapons into the country to alter the constitutional order".

In addition to halting "the entire electoral process", he said military forces had suspended "all media programming", closed "land, air, and sea" borders, and imposed a mandatory curfew.

By the end of the day, the streets of Bissau were deserted, and the military had taken control of all the main thoroughfares, AFP journalists observed.

Guinea-Bissau is among the world's poorest countries and is also a hub for drug trafficking between Latin America and Europe, a trade facilitated by the nation's long history of political instability.

The country's National Electoral Commission (CNE) was additionally attacked by unidentified armed men on Wednesday, commission communications official Abdourahmane Djalo told AFP.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was "following the situation with deep concern", his spokesman said, and urged all stakeholders to "exercise restraint and respect the rule of law".

The country's former colonial ruler Portugal additionally called for the resumption of the electoral process, discouraging "any act of institutional or civic violence".

- Repeat crises -

More than 6,780 security personnel, including from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Stabilisation Force, were deployed for Guinea-Bissau's vote and the post-election period.

Observation missions from the African Union and ECOWAS, plus the West African Elders Forum, expressed "deep concern" in a statement, deploring what they called a "blatant attempt to disrupt the democratic process".

Guinea-Bissau's last presidential vote in 2019 was marked by a four-month post-election crisis as both main candidates claimed victory.

That election pitted Embalo against Pereira, the candidate from the country's main opposition party PAIGC, which secured Guinea-Bissau's independence from Portugal in 1974.

Sunday's election notably excluded PAIGC and Pereira, who were struck from the final list of candidates and parties by the Supreme Court, which said they had filed their official applications too late.

The opposition says PAIGC's exclusion from the presidential and parliamentary elections amounts to "manipulation" and maintains that Embalo's term expired on February 27, five years to the day after his inauguration.

The west African region has been rife with coups in recent years, with Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger and Guinea all seeing their governments toppled.

R.Krejci--TPP