Guinea-Bissau leader accuses convicted drug baron over failed coup by AFP Staff Writers Bissau (AFP) Feb 10, 2022 Guinea-Bissau's President Umaro Sissoco Embalo on Thursday accused a former Guinean navy chief with links to the drug trade and two accomplices of being behind a failed coup in the west African nation on February 1. Heavily armed men attacked government buildings in the capital Bissau while Embalo was chairing a cabinet meeting. Embalo, 49, later told reporters that he had escaped the five-hour gun battle unharmed and that 11 people had been killed in the fighting. On Thursday, he named former rear admiral Jose Americo Bubo Na Tchuto, who was head of the navy in the early 2000s, among three men he said had been arrested over the attack. He named the other two as Tchamy Yala, also a former officer, and Papis Djeme, and said all three had been arrested. Embalo linked the attack on government buildings to the transatlantic drug trade. The former Portuguese colony of Guinea-Bissau is a hub for the trafficking of cocaine from Latin America into Africa. "The hands holding the guns are people with links to the big drug cartels," Embalo claimed The three men named by the president were arrested in April 2013 aboard a boat off the coast of West Africa by undercover operatives from the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). The DEA officers posing as traffickers said the men had attempted to negotiate a deal to import cocaine into Guinea-Bissau and then redirect it to North America and Europe. Jose Americo Bubo Na Tchuto, who was described by the DEA as a drug baron, was sentenced to four years in prison in the US while Tchamy Yala and Papis Djeme received jail terms of five years and six-and-a-half years respectively. All three returned to Guinea-Bissau after their release.
UN court orders Uganda to pay DR Congo $325 mn war damages The Hague (AFP) Feb 9, 2022 The UN's top court on Wednesday ordered Uganda to pay the Democratic Republic of Congo $325 million over a brutal war two decades ago, just a fraction of what Kinshasa demanded. The ruling by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) comes as a blow to DR Congo after it sought a massive $11 billion in reparations over the devastating conflict that lasted from 1998 to 2003. Judges said Kinshasa had failed to prove its African neighbour was directly responsible for any more than 15,000 of the hundr ... read more
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