Guinea-Bissau’s President Umaro Sissoco Embalo said he will run for a second term in November, backtracking on earlier vows to step down and potentially stoking tensions.
Mr Embalo, after a trip to Russia, Azerbaijan and Hungary, told reporters at the airport: “I will be a candidate in my own succession.’’
Mr Embalo has been at odds with the political opposition in the coup-prone West African nation over when his current five-year term, which began in 2020, ends.
The opposition saod his current five-year term ran out at the end of February, while the Supreme Court of Justice ruled that it ends on September 4.
There has also been disgruntlement after Mr Embalo said presidential and legislative elections would not be held until November 30 this year.
Originally scheduled for November 2024, the parliamentary polls were indefinitely postponed, citing technical and financial obstacles and scrambling the electoral calendar.
“I will talk to the political parties first about the forthcoming elections, and then I will issue a presidential decree,’’ Mr Embalo said late on Monday.
A 52-year-old former army general, Mr Embalo inherited a long-running political impasse in a country where coups and unrest have been common since independence from Portugal in 1974.
He has said there were two attempts to overthrow him during his presidency, the latest being in December 2023.
The president in 2024 also said that his wife dissuaded him from running for a second term.