Guinea-Bissau president assassinated by military
GUINEA BISSAU: Guinea-Bissau soldiers killed President Joao Bernardo
Vieira early Monday in the hours after a bomb attack which claimed the
life of the West African country's military chief, an army spokesman
said.
Weeks of tensions between the President's followers and the military
leadership had erupted into clashes in the capital on Sunday.
"President Vieira was killed by the army as he tried to flee his
house which was being attacked by a group of soldiers close to the chief
of staff Tagme Na Waie, early this morning," the military spokesman,
Zamora Induta, told AFP.
Induta added that the President was "one of the main people
responsible for the death of Tagme."
Vieira was trying to escape when he was "taken down by bullets fired
by these soldiers," he said.
Vieira, 69, had been President on and off for nearly 23 years. He was
returned to power in 2005 elections, six years after the end of a civil
war that had driven him from office.
"The country will start up now. This man had blocked any momentum in
this small country," Induta said.
On Sunday, a bomb attack on the military headquarters killed Tagme,
head of the joint chiefs of staff, in Bissau.
Bissau, Monday, AFP |