Guinea Bissau set for Sunday’s presidential runoff to elect new president

Voters are set for the presidential runoff to elect a new president in Guinea Bissau on Sunday as citizens cast their ballots to enthrone a new government that would stabilize the country.

After months of waiting, people are being asked to choose between two former prime ministers, Domingos Simoes Pereira, from the traditional ruling PAIGC party, and opposition figure Umaro Sissoco Embalo.

Embalo,
a former general who wears a red-and-white Arab keffiyeh headress, is pitching
himself as a unifier of the nation.

He is
gambling that he can overhaul Pereira’s lead by getting backing from losing
candidates in the first round in November.

“Umaro
Sissoco Embalo has been able to rally all of the country’s heavyweights behind
him,” said political analyst Agusto Nhaga.

A
small country of 1.8 million people, Guinea-Bissau gained independence in 1974,
but has suffered a string of military coups, attempted coups and political
assassinations ever since.

After
the latest coup in 2012, the West African regional bloc ECOWAS deployed a
nearly 700-member force to try to stabilise the country.

– Raucous
campaign –

The
election campaign passed loudly and colourfully and with no violence. 

The
two weeks before the runoff vote saw parades in the capital Bissau by
supporters of rival candidates, touting effigies of their champions.

Pereira,
56, a civil engineer by training, won 40.1 percent of the vote in the first
round on November 24. 

He
belongs to the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde
(PAIGC), which is historically rooted in the fight to end Portugal’s colonial
rule.

Embalo,
47, came second with 27.65 percent. He represents Madem, an opposition party
formed by PAIGC rebels.  

The
latest crisis erupted in 2015 when the incumbent president, Jose Mario Vaz,
sacked Pereira as prime minister, a move that incensed the PAIGC.

Thereafter,
Vaz was unable to get parliamentary backing for his proposed prime ministers —
and parliament did not sit for nearly two years until April 2018 when Aristides
Gomes was appointed “consensus” prime minister.

Vaz
himself contested the first round of voting, but came in a lowly fourth, with
just 12.4 percent.

– ‘Don’t trust
politicians’ statements’ –

In a
hard-fought two-hour TV debate on Thursday, Pereira accused Embalo of receiving
illegal funding from abroad.

“The
money which you are bringing into the country isn’t going through legal
channels,” he said.

Embalo
denied this and hit back, accusing Pereira of “dipping into the state’s
coffers” to finance his election campaign and lashing the PAIGC for
mismanaging the economy.

On
the streets of Bissau, some voters questioned by AFP voiced scepticism about
the country’s politicians or were critical of the PAIGC.

“I
don’t trust the sweet-sounding statements made by politicians,” said
carpenter Roberto Fo Indi, who said his father had fought in the war of
independence “and died in poverty”.

Suleimane
Camara, a teacher who said he had not been paid for six months, lashed out at
the PAIGC for being “unable to meet the public’s basic needs”.

But
fruit seller Joana Imbana said a victory by Pereira “will give a kickstart
to development”.

Guinea-Bissau
ranks 177th out of 189 on the UN Human Development Index, and two-thirds of the
population live on less than $2 (1.8 euros) a day. 

Latin American drug runners have exploited the instability and poverty to make Guinea-Bissau a hub along the cocaine-smuggling route to Europe.

Source link : https://newscentral.africa/guinea-bissau-set-for-sundays-presidential-runoff-to-elect-new-president/

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Publish date : 2019-12-27 08:00:00

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