SÃO TOMÉ, São Tomé and
Príncipe
The African island nation's leader accused his prime minister of excessive absences and gave his party 72 hours to form a new administration.
The president of São Tomé and
Príncipe, Carlos Vila Nova, has fired his country's government and its prime
minister.
In a statement issued on
Monday, Nova accused Prime Minister Patrice Emery Trovoada of "prolonged
absences" and said the government had failed to provide solutions to major
economic and financial challenges, as well as their "social repercussions".
It is not yet clear what
specifically precipitated his decision to summarily dismiss the current
administration, but he has given his party — to which Trovoada also belongs —
72 hours to form a new government.
The island nation is generally
regarded as a stable democracy in a region often marked by violent transfers of
power, military juntas and long-term dictatorships.
However, São Tomé and Príncipe
faced a failed coup attempt in November 2022, which saw four assailants killed
by security forces in the midst of an assault on the country's military
barracks that Trovoada described as "an attack with weapons of war on the
country’s armed forces".
Several people were detained,
among them former presidential candidate Delfim Neves, who had insisted that an
election earlier that year had been rigged against him.
According to international NGO
Freedom House, Trovoada's government has since installed many of its allies in
public positions. It has also been accused of promoting and protecting military
officers who participated in the abuse of people captured during the coup
attempt.
While São Tomé and Príncipe is
generally credited with maintaining strong political institutions, corruption
and bad governance — particularly when it comes to public services and the uses
of foreign aid and investment — have fuelled popular discontent and protests.
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