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Guinea-Bissau poll overshadowed by assassination

By Allen Yero Embalo
Guinea A street of Bissau.  By Issouf Sanogo AFP
MAR 19, 2012 LISTEN
A street of Bissau. By Issouf Sanogo (AFP)

BISSAU (AFP) - Guinea-Bissau on Monday tallied votes cast in a presidential poll tainted by the murder of an ex-military intelligence chief, raising fears of further trouble in the chronically unstable country.

As election security was boosted, the military denied involvement in the shooting of in a country whose history is chequered by coups and deadly score-settling between the army and state.

The national elections commission said the murder was "an isolated case."

"Events last night have nothing to do with the electoral process," said polling chief Desejado Lima da Costa.

Guinea-Bissau's election is being held up as a test of the country's commitment to stability -- with post-poll army reform seen as vital to normalising a dysfunctional state sorely in need of development.

However, just hours after a peaceful day of voting ended, former army intelligence chief Diallo was shot dead by men in military dress as he sat on the terrace of a restaurant near his home, sources said.

"There is a lot of concern and apprehension," political analyst Rui Landim told AFP as early results trickled in. "If everything is handled peacefully we can save the stability, but for now there is a risk that things degenerate."

No clear motive has emerged for the killing of Diallo, who was accused of involvement in a 2009 bombing that killed the country's then army chief and prompted the murder of president Joao Bernardo Vieira in a revenge attack a few hours later.

"They shot at him (Diallo) over five times," a police source said, adding the body was taken to his home.

Daba Na Wagna, co-ordinator of a joint military-police election security team said Diallo's murder was "deplorable because there was a loss of human life, but the army was not involved from any angle."

Diallo was director of military intelligence until April 2010, when he was arrested with other top officers on suspicion of involvement in the 2009 attack.

It was also in April 2010 that the country was rocked by an army mutiny in which the army chief was overthrown by his deputy and former prime minister Carlos Gomes Junior was briefly abducted and threatened with death.

The mutiny prompted the European Union and the United States to suspend monetary aid for badly needed reforms to the army, which receives 10 percent of the country's budget.

Gomes, who stepped down from government to run in the presidential election, was among three frontrunners in early results alongside former president Kumba Yala and national assembly speaker Serifo Nhamadjo.

Landim predicted a second-round runoff between Gomes and Yala, with Nhamadjo acting as kingmaker. A total of nine candidates contested the vote and provisional results should be released by the weekend.

Although the election period has been peaceful, some fear violence or even military intervention if the army does not approve of the winning candidate.

Guinea-Bissau achieved independence from Portugal in 1974, the only west African nation to do so through armed combat.

But ever since then, the army and state have remained in constant, often deadly conflict, with the result that no president has ever completed a full term in office. Three have been overthrown in coups and one was assassinated in office in 2009.

A dysfunctional state with a porous coastline and an archipelago where hidden airstrips can be set up, it has also provided fertile ground for Latin American drug lords looking for a hub to ship their cocaine to Europe.

The United States in 2010 labeled the country's air force and naval chiefs "drug kingpins," with trafficking said to involve leaders of the country's highest institutions.

Sunday's election came after the last president, Malam Bacai Sanha, died in January following a long illness.

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