Guinea-Bissau's
President Jose Mario Vaz sacked Prime Minister Carlos Correia and dissolved his
government on Thursday, in a move that threatened to deepen political turmoil
in the tiny West African nation.
Guinea-Bissau's President Jose Mario Vaz arrives to speak with journalists after a meeting with his Portuguese counterpart Anibal Cavaco Silva (not pictured) at Belem presidential palace in Lisbon June 19, 2014. |
Correia was appointed prime minister in October - becoming the
third person in the post in the span of three months - in an attempt to end a
crisis sparked by a row within the ruling PAIGC party.
His dismissal by Vaz now
threatens to bring renewed instability.
"Carlos Correia's
government is incapable of managing the crisis and creating better political
and institutional conditions for (the government's) full function," Vaz
said in an address at the presidency.
He called for
consultations among political parties to select a prime minister charged with
forming a new government.
There was no immediate comment from Correia or his
allies. The streets of the capital Bissau remained calm, but security forces
were deployed at buildings housing state institutions.
Guinea-Bissau
has not seen a democratically elected leader serve a full term since
independence from Portugal in 1974.
It
has had nine coups or attempted coups since 1980, and the turbulence has helped
it become a major transit point for cocaine trafficked from South America to
Europe.
As
it was slowly emerging from a military takeover in 2012, Guinea-Bissau was once
again plunged into an institutional crisis when in August Vaz dismissed his
political rival Domingos Simoes Pereira, then serving as prime minister.
The
two men, both leading figures in the PAIGC, had been locked in a long-running
power struggle exacerbated by their overlapping duties under Bissau's political
system.
Correia's
compromise appointment did little to heal the rift within the ruling party. The
row spilled over into parliament in January when the PAIGC expelled 15 MPs who
had called for Pereira's resignation, leading to paralysis in the institution.
Reuters
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