Monday, April 16, 2012

Guinea-Bissau junta agrees pact with some parties

The junta in Guinea-Bissau has said it is setting up a transitional government along with some political parties as criticism of the coup continues.
Representatives of all of the defeated candidates in the first round of the presidential election have reportedly condemned the coup last Thursday.
Soldiers toppled the government over its alleged plans to reduce the size of the army.
No president has completed a term since independence from Portugal in 1974.
A delegation from the regional bloc Ecowas is hoping to persuade the junta to hand back power.
The latest coup happened just before the second round of presidential elections on 29 April, called after the death in January of President Malam Bacai Sanha following a long illness.
The front-runner, outgoing Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Junior, is being detained by the army along with the interim President, Raimundo Pereira.
Trade unions have called for a general strike in protest at the coup.
Borders closed A spokesperson for opposition parties, Fernando Vaz, said that existing political institutions, including parliament, would be dissolved and replaced by a National Transitional Council.
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