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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
New military coup in Guinea-Bissau leaves one hundred dead
By Trevor Johnson
19 May 1999
Fighting has erupted once again in the West African country
of Guinea-Bissau. In a military coup on May 6-7, military leader
Ansumane Mane sent forces to attack the presidential guards of
President Joao Bernardo Vieira and remove him from office. Within
weeks of vowing never again to resort to arms to settle the dispute
between them, they have brought one of the world's poorest countries
to the brink of disaster once more.
Troops loyal to Mane rounded up the remnants of Vieira's men
on Saturday, May 8, using heavy arms and machine-gun fire, and
claiming at least six more lives. This brought the number killed
in the latest violence to around a hundred, with at least 263
injured, many seriously. The national Red Cross society reported
between 95 and 100 deaths, including military and civilian casualties.
Forty-six civilians were killed when a shell landed in a compound.
Military casualties are believed to be higher, but neither the
new ruling junta nor the government forces have offered figures.
The Red Cross reports a lack of medicines to assist the wounded.
Those who fled the fighting in the capital, Bissau, on May
6, returned following the surrender of the government forces.
The May 8 shooting in the city centre caused another exodusit
is not known how many are still displaced. Shelter is urgently
needed for those whose houses were destroyed or damaged during
the latest conflict. The damage is highest in the city centre
and the Belem, Cuntum and Ajuda districts.
After coming to power in 1980, on the basis of his role in
the 1974 war for independence, Vieira and the African Party for
the Independence of Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde (PAIGC) employed
socialist and anti-imperialist phrases to hide their true politics.
For years, no other party was allowed to challenge their grip
on power. Since last year, however, the bitter feuds between different
layers within the ruling party have come to the surface, and revealed
their real relation to the former colonial powers.
Showing his support for the national borders laid down in an
agreement between France and Portugal, Vieira charged that Mane,
one of his comrades-in-arms during the liberation war and then
head of the army, had organised gun-running to rebels demanding
independence for the Casamance region of Senegal. Mane responded
by claiming that it was in fact the president who had directed
the arms dealing. Mane then launched his first coup attempt in
February to remove Vieira from office.
Such was the alienation of the majority from the party that
led the war for independence that no movement came forward to
prevent the military coup. Some even hailed the end of the Vieira
era. Lacking popular support, Vieira turned instead to the main
imperialist power in the region, France. Together with troops
from neighbouring states under its influence, France used the
crisis to strengthen its presence.
The situation having been stabilised by the use of these troops,
the parliament in Bissau was reconvened on February 20 on the
basis of a shaky agreement between the two rival factions of the
ruling party. Its first act was to bring charges against the former
administration. Vieira was put on trial for illegal arms dealing
and for inviting foreign troops into the country. He had already
been removed from his post as PAIGC leader when the present coup
brought the charade of parliamentary democracy to an abrupt end.
After the presidential palace was set ablaze, Vieira and his family
sought asylum first in the French Embassy and later in the Portuguese.
Vieira's replacement as president was determined at a meeting
May 11 between General Mane and the political parties. Malam Sanha,
president of Guinea-Bissau's legislature, the Assembleia Nacional
Popular, was chosen as interim president until new general
and presidential elections are held in November. (Elections
promised for March never took place).
Interim Prime Minister Francisco Fadul was on his way back
from a fundraising meeting with aid donors in Lisbon, Portugal
when the second coup took place. He flew home on May 8, vowing
to move on with the democratic process as planned and saying that
Vieira would be free to go into exile. However a spokesman for
the junta, Major Zamora Induta, who is particularly hostile to
the ex-leader, said he must be tried for "treason".
Sanha spoke on the Portuguese Renascenca radio station, appealing
to the former colonial power, Portugal, to "do as it has
done up to now" by making the international community understand
that there was no coup and rallying international support for
the West African country. "I, myself in particular, will
do my utmost to ensure that this uprising will be for the good
of the people of Guinea-Bissau and, above all, for the consolidation
of democracy and development," Sanha said.
It seems that the new administration is looking for backing
from Portugal rather than from France. France and Mali have condemned
the junta's take-over, as have the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS), the Organisation of African Unity (OAU)
and UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Fred Eckhard, Annan's spokesman,
said on Tuesday that the UN was "reviewing the options"
with regard to its involvement in the peace process. France has
announced economic sanctions against Guinea-Bissau, claiming this
is in response to the burning down of the French embassy.
During the conflict last year, up to 400,000 people were displaced
within the country. The situation of those who have returned to
their homes is still considered to be very precarious.
Several thousand refugees have not yet returned.
In Casamance, Mouvement de Forces Democratique de la Casamance
(MFDC) have urged Lisbon to mediate an end to the 17-year-long
war in the area. MFDC's Secretary-General Mamadou Sane said that
the conflict dated back to a convention signed in 1886 when Portugal
ceded Casamance to Senegal, then a French colony.
See Also:
Guinea-Bissau president to
be put on trial
[27 April 1999]
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