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AFRICA NEWS
One killed as Bissau troops hunt failed coup suspects: army
by Staff Writers
Bissau (AFP) Dec 27, 2011

UN chief condemns Guinea-Bissau violence
United Nations (AFP) Dec 27, 2011 - UN chief Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday condemned the violence in Guinea-Bissau, where authorities said renegade troops had mounted a failed coup, and called for a full inquiry.

"The secretary-general condemns the use of force to settle differences in Guinea-Bissau," Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky said, urging respect for the "lawful" civilian authorities.

"The secretary-general also encourages the authorities of Guinea-Bissau to respect due process in the investigation of the reported events."

At least one soldier was killed and two others wounded as troops in the West African nation clashed with renegade forces overnight following an alleged failed coup, an army officer said.

Soldiers deployed in the streets of the capital Bissau on Monday, some of them demanding better pay, after attacking the headquarters of general staff and seizing weapons from a gun shop.

The head of the armed forces said navy chief Rear Admiral Jose Americo Bubo Na Tchuto, who has previously been accused of involvement in coup plans and in the drugs trade, was arrested over what he described as a coup attempt.


Troops in Guinea-Bissau clashed with renegade forces overnight, leaving at least one soldier dead as they combed the capital following an alleged failed coup, an army officer said Tuesday.

"We had gone to Luanda (district) to arrest a group of suspects," an army captain told AFP on condition of anonymity. "They were armed and opened fire on my men; I lost one and two others were wounded."

Soldiers deployed in the streets of Bissau on Monday, some of them demanding better pay, after attacking the headquarters of general staff and seizing weapons from the gun shop.

A raid on the home of a lawmaker thought to be harbouring mutineers turned up a "veritable arsenal" of weapons, Interior Minister Fernando Gomes said.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton condemned the violence.

Ashton "is deeply concerned by yesterday's violent actions in Guinea-Bissau by some elements within the military," a spokesman said in statement Tuesday. "She condemns in the strongest possible terms such anti-constitutional actions. ... Violent attempts against constitutional legality cannot be allowed, and must stop."

A manhunt was being carried out jointly by soldiers, police and paramilitary police, military sources said.

"There will be investigations, and those identified will be brought to justice," Foreign Minister Mamadu Djalo Pires said as he briefed diplomats on the unrest, which took place as President Malam Bacai Sanha was receiving medical treatment in Paris.

The head of the armed forces later said the navy chief -- Rear Admiral Jose Americo Bubo Na Tchuto, who has previously been accused of involvement in coup plans and in the drugs trade -- was arrested over what he described as a coup attempt.

Long thought close to army chief of staff General Antonio Indjai, Bubo Na Tchuto had reportedly fallen out with him, and some observers surmised that the unrest involved a settling of scores.

The captain said his unit had moved in to arrest a group that included lawmakers and former ministers of the ruling African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) who are reportedly opposed to Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Junior.

An officer said two of the lawmakers, Francisco Conduto De Pina and Roberto Cacheu, were spotted in a southern district of Bissau but got away amid the shooting.

Cacheu was thought to be harbouring some of the mutineers, and security forces fired rockets at his home, leaving some of the walls pockmarked and burnt, an AFP journalist reported.

Gomes told reporters of the siege: "They (the mutineers) opened fire on one of our soldiers when he went through the door. His comrades returned fire, there were a lot of explosions because of grenades and other munitions stockpiled in the house."

He added: "It was a veritable arsenal."

A fierce exchange of fire that lasted close to three hours also erupted in the seaside capital's Antula neighbourhood overnight, military sources and witnesses said.

"In Monday morning's attack, many soldiers were able to make away with weapons and ammunition. My task was to recover the weapons and arrest the suspects," another military commander said.

"But they offered resistance and I had to resort to heavy equipment, including bazookas," he said, without elaborating on the identity of the suspects or any casualty toll.

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S.Sudan army 'accidentally shot' Christmas worshippers
Juba (AFP) Dec 27, 2011 - South Sudanese soldiers accidentally shot dead four Christmas Eve worshippers and wounded 15, the young nation's military spokesman said on Tuesday.

"This is terrible," Philip Aguer told AFP. "SPLA has never done such a thing before in our history."

The tragedy occurred on December 24 in Pigi County, Jonglei state.

Soldiers of the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) opened fire when they found one of their colleagues with nine bullets in his body after an earlier shooting near the church, Aguer said.

"Unfortunately they started shooting randomly," and hit worshippers fleeing the church at the sound of the gunfire, he added.

The second lieutenant in charge of the platoon has been arrested and an investigation ordered, the spokesman said.

SPLA was the rebel force that battled Khartoum until a 2005 peace agreement ended two decades of civil war, ahead of South Sudan's independence in July this year.

Aguer said tensions had been raised since December 23 when a landmine killed an SPLA soldier who was helping to protect the burial ceremony for George Athor, who fought for the southern rebels and reached the rank of general before turning renegade last year.

The South Sudanese vice president announced last week that Athor, of Pigi County, had been killed in a battle with government forces.



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Four dead in southern Ivory Coast clashes: officials
Abidjan (AFP) Dec 26, 2011
Four people were killed in inter-ethnic clashes in Sikensi, a town near the Ivory Coast economic capital Abidjan, local authorities said Monday. The clashes on Sunday and Monday pitting indigenous Abidji against ethnic Malinke hailing from the north also left 13 people injured, an official told AFP. The wounded were hospitalised in Sikensi or taken to Abidjan some 60 kilometres (35 miles ... read more


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