The
executive head of the West African regional bloc ECOWAS says the junta in
Guinea- Bissau has agreed to hand back power and return the country to
constitutional rule soon.
The
President of the ECOWAS Commission, Desire Kadre Ouedraogo, said Ivory Coast
President Alassane Ouattara, who chairs the regional bloc, will take steps with
other parties to return Guinea-Bissau to constitutional rule in the coming
days. He was speaking after talks in the capital Bissau but gave no specific
timeline.
Soldiers in
Guinea-Bissau, who have a reputation of meddling in the country's politics,
seized power last Thursday and arrested the country's interim president and a
former prime minister, cutting short an unfinished presidential election.
Presidential
hopeful still in detention
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| Kadre Desire Ouedraogo 'demanded the release of pirsoners' in Guinea- Bissau |
Ouedraogo
said ECOWAS insisted in the meeting with the junta that the release of the two
officials detained during the coup was an essential step toward a return to
constitutional order.
Soldiers
continue to detain ex-premier and presidential front-runner Carlos Gomes Junior
and interim President Raimundo Pereira following assaults on their homes last
week.
Gomes
Junior came close to winning an outright majority in a first-round presidential
vote last month and a second-round run-off had been set for April 29.
![]() |
| Carlos Gomes Junior after hearing he was leading in the first round of elections in March |
Over the
last few days, the coup leaders have faced increasing isolation as their
intervention was condemned by the African Union, the United Nations and the
United States.
The Community of Portuguese Speaking Countries, to which
Guinea-Bissau belongs, has threatened to impose sanctions if the country does
not restore constitutional order.
Echoes of
2010
For
ex-foreign minister Mamadou Djalo Pires the blame for the coup rests with one
person: the head of the country's armed forces General Antonio Indjai.
"We
know that there is a self-styled military command, which claims that General
Antonio Indjai was arrested, but that is just farcical," Pires said.
"Indjai was behind the coup."
The events
of the last few days are reminiscent of an abortive uprising in 2010. A junta
led by Indjai took the same prime minister, Carlos Gomes Junior, captive but
then released him several hours later in the face of international pressure.
However, Zamora Induta, military chief of staff at the time, was toppled by his
own troops and kept in prison for months.
Military
resists reform
It appears
the military in Guinea Bissau can do more or less what they like with impunity.
Normally such conduct would lead to demotion and a jail term, but not in Guinea
Bissau where Indjai, deputy head of the general staff and one of the plotters,
had himself promoted to commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
Relations
between Indjai and Carlos Gomes Junior have been tense ever since. Paulo
Gorjao, an analyst with the Lisbon-based Portuguese Institute of International
Relations and Security (IPRIS), says there is a sort of truce between the two.
![]() |
| Alassane Ouattara 'steps to return Guinea-Bissau to constitutional rule' |
"Indjai
tolerated Carlos Gomes Junior, but in the meantime the prime minister has
acquired great prestige and influence in the international community, which was
not in the military's interest. So it was only question of time before there
would be another coup," he believes.
The
government of Carlos Gomes Junior has tried over the last few years to reform
the military with outside help. But Indjai's appointment as head of the armed
forces prompted a European Union mission to pull out of Guinea-Bissau in 2010,
removing eight security advisors.
![]() |
| Still in captivity: interim president Raimundo Pereira |
More
recently, Angola, another former Portuguese colony, said ít was thinking of
removing its 200-strong military mission.
Despite these setbacks, the
government of Carlos Gomes Junior showed that it was determined to maintain an
international mission for the reform of the armed forces in the country.
It is
possible that the recent coup may have been triggered by the military's fear of
losing their autonomy. The illegal drug trade, often blamed for political
instability in the past, was probably on this occasion of little significance.
Author:
Mark Caldwell (AFP, Reuters, with additional material from Johannes Beck)
Editor: Daniel Pelz/ rm





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