Guinea-Bissau forms new Govt

  • 13/10/2015
President Jose Mario Vaz (Reuters)
President Jose Mario Vaz (Reuters)

Guinea-Bissau has formed a new government, ending a two-month political stalemate in the coup-plagued west African nation.

The country has been in turmoil since President Jose Mario Vaz fired prime minister Domingos Simoes Pereira on August 12 over a series of disputes, placing the head of state at loggerheads with his ruling African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde.

The new team includes 15 ministers and 14 secretaries of state, mostly from the previous government and the ruling PAIGC, according to a presidential decree issued early Tuesday (local time).

Instability in Guinea-Bissau, which gained independence from Portugal in 1974 after a war with its colonial power lasting more than 10 years, is nothing new.

The country has suffered intermittent unrest since its liberation, as well as a series of military coups attributed largely to the unprecedented bloating of the army after the war.

The chronic volatility has fanned poverty in the country of 1.6 million, with few resources other than cashew nuts and fish, attracting South American drug cartels who turned it into a cocaine-trafficking hub.

AFP