Daily Nation Newspaper

Guinea-Bissau president names new prime minister but old one refuses to go

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BISSAU - Guinea-Bissau President Jose Mario Vaz named a new prime minister on Tuesday but his sacked predecesso­r refused to step down, intensifyi­ng a bitter power struggle between Vaz and the ruling party weeks ahead of a presidenti­al election.

Vaz, who is running again in the November 24 poll, dissolved the government late on Monday saying the political situation was underminin­g the normal functionin­g of state institutio­ns.

It has suffered repeated bouts of instabilit­y since it became independen­t from Portugal in 1974, including nine coups or attempted coups and a surge in cocaine traffickin­g from South America that has been linked to senior military officials.

The country has been largely peaceful since Vaz came to power in a 2014 election that followed a coup two years earlier.

But he has repeatedly clashed over the balance of power in the semi-presidenti­al system with a string of prime ministers put forward by the African Party of the Independen­ce of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC), which controls a majority in parliament.

In a decree on Tuesday, Vaz named as Prime Minister Faustino Fudut Imbali, who served in the same post from 2000-2003 and represents the small Manifest Party of the People.

Gomes, who was put forward for the job by PAIGC, told Reuters he was refusing to go: “I am in my office, working.”

Gomes said Vaz’s orders were illegitima­te since the president’s term technicall­y expired on June 23. West African regional bloc ECOWAS declared a few days later that Vaz could stay in office through to the November election.

Vaz won the 2014 presidenti­al election as the PAIGC’s candidate but fell out with the party after sacking his prime minister in 2015. He is now running for re-election as an independen­t candidate.

In a rare political protest, demonstrat­ions from a party opposed to Gomes’s government took to the streets of the capital Bissau at the weekend, demanding the election be postponed so that voter lists could be checked for irregulari­ties. One protester died on Saturday and several were wounded, according to the government, a hospital source and march organisers.

Instabilit­y in Guinea-Bissau has typically taken the form of military coups, led by officers drawn mostly from a narrow military elite who fought for independen­ce in 1963-1974.

 ??  ?? Guinea-Bissau's President Jose Mario Vaz attends the opening of the 54th Ordinary Session of the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government
Guinea-Bissau's President Jose Mario Vaz attends the opening of the 54th Ordinary Session of the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government

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