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Guinea-Bissau on Wednesday launched a major investigation into a foiled attempt to overthrow President Umaro Sissoco Embalo, who survived a gun attack in the uprising that claimed 11 lives, according to the government of the poor West African nation.
Heavily armed men on Tuesday afternoon surrounded government buildings in the capital Bissau where Embalo and his prime minister were believed to be attending a cabinet meeting.
Embalo, 49, later told reporters he had been unharmed during a five-hour gun battle, which he described as a plot to wipe out the government in Guinea-Bissau, one of Africa’s most unstable countries.
AFP journalists reported hearing sustained gunfire, and the president said several people were killed.
A military source on Wednesday told AFP that six soldiers had died, but did not specify whether they had been attacking or defending the president.
On Wednesday, life was slowly returning to the streets of Bissau as shops and banks reopened, according to AFP correspondents.
Soldiers were patrolling the streets, however, and also blocked access to the Palace of Government complex where the attack took place.
The military source said a commission of enquiry had launched a vast dragnet, adding that military intelligence agents were gathering information at government headquarters.
‘Cocktail of divergences’
Guinea-Bissau, a coastal state of around two million people lying south of Senegal, has suffered four military coups since independence from Portugal in 1974, its most recent in 2012.
In 2014, the country vowed to return to democracy, but it has enjoyed little stability since and the armed forces wield substantial clout.
At a news conference on Tuesday, President Embalo said that assailants had tried to “kill the president of the republic and the entire cabinet”.
“The attackers could have spoken to me before these bloody events that have seriously injured many and claimed lives,” he added, appearing calm.
The identity and motives of the assailants remain unclear.
But Embalo said the attack was linked to decisions he had taken “to fight drug trafficking and corruption”.
Guinea-Bissau suffers from endemic corruption, and is known as a hub for cocaine trafficking between Latin America and Europe.
Vincent Foucher of France’s CNRS research centre said Embalo, a former general, may have sparked anger with moves to assert greater authority over the army.
But Senegalese analyst Babacar Justin Ndiaye spoke of a “cocktail of divergences” at the top of the leadership, notably between the president and his prime minister, Nuno Gomes Nabiam.
Ndiaye also said President Embalo was at odds with parliament over the sharing of oil resources at the border with Senegal.
Wave of coups
Both the African Union and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), of which Guinea-Bissau is a member, on Tuesday condemned what they termed an “attempted coup”.
They were joined on Wednesday by France, which lashed “the coup attempt” in Bissau and voiced “respect for the constitutional order and… support for the democratic institutions”.
The events sparked fear that the country would join the ranks of other West African governments that have fallen to military coups recently.
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(AFP)
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