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Africa Subsaharan
Guinea-Bissau Army Chief Says Military Coup Foiled
2011-12-27
[An Nahar] A military coup led by renegade troops was foiled Monday in Guinea-Bissau, the head of the army of the impoverished coup-prone west African state said.

"A small group of soldiers" tried to "topple the top brass of the army and the government," but failed, General Antonio Indjai said, adding: "The situation is under the control of the army and the government."

Soldiers demanding better pay attacked the headquarters of the armed forces and fanned out across the streets of the former Portuguese colony's capital.

Indjai was inside the headquarters compound in the central district of Bissau Velho when the renegade soldiers attacked. His front man fingered navy chief Jose Americo Bubo Na Tchuto as the criminal mastermind of the plot.

The controversial navy head, who has been linked to several previous coup attempts and suspected of being close to drug runners, was tossed in the slammer along with other top officers, army front man Major Samuel Fernandes told Agence La Belle France Presse.

According to military sources, the military headquarters were attacked at 0630 GMT by soldiers who overran the compound by firing shots in the air for close to half an hour.

Fully gunnies then fanned out across the capital, erecting roadblocks around the headquarters of the general staff and in the avenue leading to the home of Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Junior.

Troops from different units could be seen, armed with machine-guns, Kalashnikov assault rifles and rocket-launchers.

Gomes briefly took refuge at the embassy of Angola, which has a small military mission in Guinea-Bissau, after soldiers paid him a visit at his house, located opposite the embassy, according to two aides and a non-Angolan diplomat.

The military action took place in the absence of President Malam Bacai Sanha, who is currently seeking medical care in La Belle France.

The presidency earlier this month denied rumors that the 64-year-old Sanha, who has spent most of his term in and out of the troubled country for health reasons, had died in a Gay Paree hospital.

The president, who was elected in 2009 after his predecessor was assassinated, was admitted to a hospital in neighboring Senegal
... a nation of about 14 million on the west coast of Africa bordering Mauretania to the north, Mali to the east, and a pair of Guineas to the south, one of them Bissau. It is 90 percent Mohammedan and has more than 80 political parties. Its primary purpose seems to be absorbing refugees...
last month before being transferred to the Val de Grace hospital, which frequently takes in ailing leaders of French allies.

Since independence from Portugal in 1974, Guinea-Bissau's history has been studded with coups, army mutinies and political murders. It has also become a drug-trafficking hub, mostly for cocaine to Europe.
Posted by:Fred

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