Google – AFP, 27 october 2012
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Captain
Pansau N'Tchama poses in 2009 (AFP/File)
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BISSAU —
Guinea Bissau's military on Saturday announced the arrest of the man accused of
being the mastermind behind an attack on an elite army barracks a week ago
which the government said was an attempted coup.
"We
have arrested Captain Pansau N'Tchama, leader of the October 21 attack in
Bissau," chief military spokesman Major Ussumane Conate told AFP.
"We
are busy transferring him to Bissau."
Another
spokesman, Captain Bwam Bissora, said N'Tchama had been arrested with two
suspected co-conspirators in the Bolama, the capital of the Bijagos archipelago
on the closest of the islands to the Bissau.
A statement
confirming the arrest was also read out on national radio.
The Sunday
dawn attack on the army barracks left at least seven people dead, including six
of the attackers.
Transition
authorities in the west African nation have accused former colonial ruler
Portugal of instigating the attack in a bid to re-instate former prime minister
Carlos Gomes Junior who was ousted in an April 12 coup.
Several
other arrests were made at the headquarters of Gomes' party in the wake of the
attack.
Two
politicians seized by soldiers were found badly beaten in the countryside on
Tuesday, and the interim government distanced itself from what it called
"isolated acts of physical brutality."
N'Tchama
was the head of a commando unit that assassinated president Joao Bernardo
Vieira in 2009. He returned last week from Portugal where he had been
undergoing military training since July 2009, security sources said this week.
It was not
immediately clear why N'Tchama might have carried out the assault, but the
captain is also a former associate of the government overthrown in the April coup.
That putsch
interrupted a presidential election between the first and second rounds, which
Gomes was leading after the initial vote.
The latest
coup bid has caused further turmoil in the west African nation which has
suffered chronic instability since independence from Portugal in 1974 due to
conflict between the army and state.
No
president has ever completed a full term in office.
Coups,
counter-coups and regular assassinations have also made the unstable nation an
attractive destination for South American druglords seeking a hub to move
cocaine into Europe.
A
transitional administration has taken over with elections planned for an
unspecified date in 2013.

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