
BISSAU (AFP) - Guinea-Bissau's new ruling junta banned marches Tuesday and warned it would crack down on demonstrators as the African Union suspended the country over last week's military coup.
The junta's threat of "severe repression" against any demonstration or march came amid growing international pressure on the leaders of the April 12 coup, after the AU levelled a threat of sanctions against the putschists.
The junta launched an "appeal to the whole population ... to refrain from organising any march or demonstration, whether for or against the overthrow of the government of Carlos Gomes Junior," it said in a statement.
"Those who disobey the order (face) severe repression," it added.
The ban followed rumours in Bissau that young supporters of former prime minister Gomes were planning a protest Tuesday afternoon in the capital.
Earlier Tuesday, the AU suspended the coup-prone west African country with immediate effect.
AU Peace and Security Council chief Ramtane Lamamra urged the AU commission -- the bloc's executive body -- and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to consider imposing sanctions on the coup leaders.
"Given the frequency of coup d'etats in Guinea-Bissau, council requests the (AU) commission in consultation with ECOWAS ... to submit to it within two weeks a decision or proposals for additional sanctions against the perpetrators," he said.
The pan-African body previously condemned the coup as "outrageous."
The junta's ban announcement came after the departure from Bissau of a high-ranking team of ECOWAS mediators who said they had agreed to restore civilian rule.
"We agreed on the fact that the soldiers accept the decision of ECOWAS... which demanded the restoration of constitutional order," the president of the bloc's commission, Kadre Desire Ouedraogo, said after meeting the putschists.
But the junta is still detaining Gomes, interim president Raimundo Pereira and several former ministers.
"We demanded the release of prisoners, which constitutes an essential condition for the return of constitutional order," Ouedraogo said.
The coup aborted a presidential run-off vote set for April 29, an election whose validity was already in doubt after several candidates, including first-round runner-up Kumba Yala, condemned the polls as fraudulent and declared a boycott.
Despite international calls for the run-off to go ahead, the army dissolved all existing institutions and declared a National Transitional Council together with opposition parties.
Continental powerhouse South Africa also added its voice Tuesday to those condemning the coup, a list that already included the UN Security Council, the United States, Canada, the AU and ECOWAS.
"South Africa deplores the recent developments in Guinea-Bissau, particularly the military intervention ... which has led to the imprisonment of several Bissauan politicians and left the country in a state of uncertainty," the foreign ministry said, calling for the military to let elections go ahead.
Five Guinea Bissau presidential hopefuls also condemned the coup Monday, but some observers called their action into question.
"There is a contradiction," said a diplomat based in Bissau.
"They are negotiating at the same time they are condemning," he said, noting however that it could be "a way to not lose out to the international community" which has threatened sanctions or even legal action against the putschists.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Monday the junta's move to declare a transitional government would only worsen the crisis.
The coup leaders justified their power grab by claiming there had been a "secret deal" with Angola to undermine the army, but have since repeatedly pledged to restore civilian rule.
Angola last year sent 200 troops to Guinea-Bissau to help reform the army.


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