In less than six months, Guinea-Bissau's presidential election will be held, which is supposed to confirm the end of the transition that the country has been in since the coup d'état on 26 November. If, for the military junta in power, 6 December will still be the date of the presidential election, for civil society actors, including the president of the Guinea-Bissau League of Human Rights, respect for that date is more than improbable. Indeed,…
This story is only covered by news sources that have yet to be evaluated by the independent media monitoring agencies we use to assess the quality and reliability of news outlets on our platform. Learn more here.
In less than six months, Guinea-Bissau's presidential election will be held, which is supposed to confirm the end of the transition that the country has been in since the coup d'état on 26 November. If, for the military junta in power, 6 December will still be the date of the presidential election, for civil society actors, including the president of the Guinea-Bissau League of Human Rights, respect for that date is more than improbable. Indeed,…