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Guinea-Bissau President At His Residence, Unclear If Attack Over, Portugal Minister Says

Guinea-Bissau’s President Umaro Sissoco Embalo

A Portuguese minister said on Tuesday the president of Guinea-Bissau was at his residence but it was unclear if an attack on the government of the West African country was over, while two African blocs denounced what they called an attempted coup.

The situation in the capital Bissau was uncertain after heavy gunfire was heard earlier near a government compound where President Umaro Sissoco Embalo had been chairing a cabinet meeting.

If a coup were confirmed in the former Portuguese colony, this would be the second in West Africa in as many weeks after the military in Burkina Faso deposed the president there on Jan. 24. read more

“The latest information I have is positive given that the president is already at his palace, at his official residence,” Portugal’s Foreign Affairs Minister Augusto Santos Silva said in an interview with Portuguese broadcaster RTP.

“But we still don’t know if the attack is over,” he added.

A Facebook post on the account of Sissoco Embalo said calm had reurned to the capital.

Earlier, the African Union and the West African bloc ECOWAS both condemned the “attempted coup” unfolding in Bissau. The AU added that some government members were being detained and called on the military to release them. It gave no details.

Political instability has blighted Guinea-Bissau for decades, with nine coups or attempted coups since independence from Portugal in 1974.

The Portuguese embassy urged its citizens in Guinea-Bissau to stay at home.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is “deeply concerned” by the reports from Guinea-Bissau, a spokesman said.

A security source with contacts inside the compound said an unknown number of people had been hit by gunfire. A second source said two people were dead, but it was unclear who they were.

Members of government did not answer telephone calls from Reuters seeking verification of what was happening.

Sissoco Embalo had begun chairing the extraordinary cabinet meeting at around 10 a.m., entering the building with a heavy security detail, a diplomatic source said.

The cabinet meeting was being held to prepare for a forthcoming ECOWAS summit in response to last week’s military takeover in Burkina Faso, the latest in a rash of coups across the region in the last 18 months. read more

“It looks increasingly hard to argue against the idea of coup contagion,” said Eric Humphrey-Smith, an analyst at risk consultancy Verisk Maplecroft.

“When added to successful coups in Mali, Burkina Faso, Guinea and Chad in the past year, there is no doubt that West African leaders are nervously looking over their shoulders.”

Written by

Additional reporting by Catarina Demony in Lisbon and Hereward Holland, Bate Felix, David Lewis, Edward McAllister and Aaron Ross; Writing by Estelle Shirbon; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Frank Jack Daniel

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