1998 Guinea-Bissau coup attempt
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| 1998 Guinea-Bissau coup attempt | |||||||
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| Part of Guinea-Bissau Civil War | |||||||
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The 1998 Guinea-Bissau coup attempt was the attempted military overthrow in Guinea-Bissau by dissident elements within the military against the João Bernardo Vieira government. Led by Brigadier-General Ansumane Mané, the coup attempt plunged the republic into the year-long Guinea-Bissau civil war, resulting in as many as thousands of deaths and the displacement of hundreds of thousands.
The failed coup was caused by the dismissal of the Brigadier-General from his position as Chief of Staff by President Vieira following alleged involvement in an arms smuggling scandal with a separatist group in Senegal, namely the Movement of Democratic Forces of Casamance (MFDC).[1] Pressured by the governments of Senegal and France to identify the culprit, the president placed the blame on him despite remonstrations of innocence.[1] Thus, President Vieira suspended Chief of Staff Mané for purported dereliction of duty. A report from an appointed committee tasked to investigate the scandal implied President Vieira was aware of the arms trafficking, leading Ansumane Mané to publicly accuse the president of agreeing to the illegal trade.[2] As a result, the president replaced the Brigadier-General with Humbert Gomes as Chief of Staff on June 6, 1998.[2]