Guinea-Bissau coup leaders set December election date
Military authorities in coup-prone Guinea-Bissau have scheduled presidential and legislative elections for December 6, despite calls for a swifter transition to civilian rule.
Transitional President, Horta N'Tam, signed a decree last Wednesday after meeting members of the National Transitional Council, military and government officials, as well as representatives of the electoral commission.
He told reporters the conditions for free and fair elections had been met.
Since seizing power from President Umaro Sissoco Embaló in November, Guinea-Bissau's coup leaders have been under pressure from the West African regional body, ECOWAS, to organise elections within a short transitional timeframe.
The regional bloc had previously rejected the junta's notion of a one-year timeline, suspended the country from its decision-making bodies and threatened further sanctions.
It remains unclear how ECOWAS will react to the election timetable now that it has been formally announced by the junta.
The November 2025 coup drew widespread criticism, with many challenging the military's decision to seize power on the eve of the official proclamation of presidential election results.
At the time, both President Embaló and his main challenger Fernando Dias claimed victory. The military said it intervened to thwart a plot to destabilise the politically fragile and unstable West African nation.
But some regional observers, including former Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan, argued the coup was staged.
Many now wait to discover the identities of those aspiring for the country's top job. The transitional charter adopted shortly after the coup already bars interim leader N'Tam and his prime minister from running.
