BISSAU- Soldiers have arrested the prime minister of Guinea-Bissau,
a military spokesman said Friday, hours after the leader's home was
attacked with grenades in what former colonial ruler Portugal described
as a military coup.
The attacks that rocked the capital of this tiny country known for cocaine trafficking late Thursday came just two weeks before Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Jr. was to take part in a presidential runoff election as the frontrunner.
Military
press attache Francelino Cunha told The Associated Press that Gomes had
been detained by the military. The whereabouts of the country's interim
president remained unknown.
The
Portuguese Foreign Ministry said it "urges the masterminds of the
military coup to respect the well-being of the Guinean democratic
authorities and free those who have been detained."
However,
a communique from an unidentified military commander that was released
Friday claims the soldiers don't want to seize power, but instead were
trying to halt an invasion from Angolan troops.
Prime Minister Gomes
had been favored to win the April 29 runoff after his challenger Kumba
Yala, a former president who was overthrown in a 2003 coup, said he
would boycott the vote because of irregularities in the first round of
balloting.
Hilo ni tukio la pili katika kipindi kifupi katika mataifa ya Afrika viongozi kupinduliwa na majeshi baada ya kubainika kuleglega katika utendaji.Wiki iliyopita Jeshi nchini Mali lilikubaliana na ECOWAS kurudisha madaraka ya kiraia baada kuhakikisha kuwa mpango wa kuwaondoa waasi wa kikulima waliokuwa wakiteka maeneo ikiwemo mji muhimu wa TIMBUKTU.
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