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Can SAF be Entrusted to Serve Singaporean PEOPLE?

motormafia

Alfrescian
Loyal
Depending on which way you look at it, Serving Singaporean People should be done either by Rid the dictator regime or the reversed if you were a PAPpy Dog.

Weather in PAPpy Dog's view this would be a disservice or in our reversed view it is a disservice when this is not done, I think this is depending on your position again.

But in this African country their soldiers just did their country a patriotic service.

Is SAF going to do it or not? Merlion already received 2 shots to it's head. Don't they get the hint? :wink::biggrin:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090302/ap_on_re_af/af_guinea_bissau

Soldiers assassinate Guinea-Bissau president


345,http%3A%2F%2Fd.yimg.com%2Fa%2Fp%2Fap%2F20090302%2Fcapt.72dc19313ac64fa2add04341ebb6b141.guinea_bissau_attack_gnb101.jpg


By ASSIMO BALDE, Associated Press Writer Assimo Balde, Associated Press Writer – 25 mins ago
In this May 18, 2006 file photo, Guinea Bissau's President Joao Bernardo AP – In this May 18, 2006 file photo, Guinea Bissau's President Joao Bernardo 'Nino' Vieira talks to the media …

BISSAU, Guinea-Bissau – Soldiers assassinated the president of Guinea-Bissau in his palace Monday hours after a bomb blast killed his rival, but the military insisted no coup was taking place in the West African nation.

A military statement broadcast on state radio attributed President Joao Bernardo "Nino" Vieira's death to an "isolated" group of unidentified soldiers whom the armed forces said they were now hunting down.

The capital, Bissau, was calm but tense despite the pre-dawn gunfight at the palace, which erupted hours after armed forces chief of staff Gen. Batiste Tagme na Waie — a longtime rival of the president — was killed by a bomb blast at his headquarters.

The former Portuguese colony has suffered multiple coups and attempted coups since 1980, when Vieira himself first took power in one. The United Nations says the impoverished nation on the Atlantic coast of Africa has recently become a key transit point for cocaine smuggled from Latin America to Europe.

Following an emergency Cabinet meeting on Monday, military spokesman Zamora Induta said top military brass told government officials "this was not a coup d'etat."

"We reaffirmed our intention to respect the democratically elected power and the constitution of the republic," Induta said. "The people who killed President Vieira have not been arrested, but we are pursuing them. They are an isolated group. The situation is under control."

The constitution calls for parliament chief Raimundo Pereira to succeed the president in the event of his death.

Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Jr. said the fact that the military did not go through with a coup deserves praise. "The military showed their patriotism by not seizing power," he said, adding that both Vieira and Waie will receive state funerals in the coming days.

Vieira had ruled Guinea-Bissau for 23 of the past 29 years. He came to power in the 1980 coup, but was forced out 19 years later at the onset of the country's civil war. He later returned from exile in Portugal to run in the country's 2005 election and won the vote.

The armed forces' statement dismissed claims that the military killed Vieira in retaliation for Waie's assassination late Sunday. The two men were considered staunch political and ethnic rivals and both had survived recent assassination attempts.

Vieira, from the minority Papel ethnic group, once blamed majority ethnic Balanta officers for attempting a coup against him, condemning several to death and others to long prison sentences.

Among them was Waie, who in the late 1980s was dropped off on a deserted island off the coast of Guinea-Bissau, according to Waie's chief of staff, Lt. Col. Bwam Namtcho. Waie was left there for years before he was allowed to return and officially pardoned by Vieira.

Namtcho said the bomb that killed Waie had been hidden underneath the staircase leading to his office.

Hours later, volleys of automatic gunfire rang out for at least two hours before dawn in Bissau and residents said soldiers had converged on Vieira's palace.

The Portuguese news agency LUSA reported that troops attacked the palace with rockets and rifles. The president's press chief, Barnabe Gomes, escaped but was struck by a bullet in his right shoulder, LUSA said.

It was the second attack on Vieira in recent months. In November, Vieira's residence was attacked by soldiers with automatic weapons who killed at least one of his guards. The president complained later that the army never intervened, leaving his presidential guard to fight off the attackers.

In January, Waie received a call from the presidency asking him to come at once, said Namtcho. But when Waie stepped outside to get into his car, unidentified gunmen opened fire on the car. Waie narrowly escaped and Namtcho says he assumed the attack had been ordered by the president.

Luis Sanca, security adviser to Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Jr., confirmed that the president had died but gave no details.

The African Union condemned the killings, calling them "cowardly and heinous attacks which have come at a time of renewed efforts by the international community to support peace-building efforts in Guinea-Bissau."

In Lisbon, the Portuguese Foreign Ministry lamented Vieira's death and said it was "fundamental that all political and military authorities in the country respect the constitutional order."

Portugal said it would call an emergency meeting of the Community of Portuguese-Speaking Countries, an eight-member organization based in Lisbon.

___

Associated Press writers Todd Pitman and Rukmini Callimachi in Dakar, Senegal and Daniel Woolls in Madrid contributed to this report.
 

motormafia

Alfrescian
Loyal
Bangladesh soldiers also did it.

That is why Lee Dynasty matas always gave Bangladeshis here special respect, they can protest at MOM in hundred and not get arrested.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090302/ts_afp/bangladeshunrestarrests_20090302035444


AFP
Bangladesh army hunts mutineers after deadly revolt

by Shafiq Alam Shafiq Alam – Sun Mar 1, 10:52 pm ET
Bangladesh hunts for mutineers after deadly revolt AFP – Bangladeshis take part in a memorial for the people killed during the recent mutiny at the Bangaldesh …

DHAKA (AFP) – Troops fanned out across Bangladesh on Monday to hunt 1,000 fugitive soldiers blamed for a revolt by border guards which left 78 dead and scores more missing, mainly army officers.

The bloodshed has left Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who took office just over two months ago, facing a major crisis which analysts say could bring further instability to the impoverished South Asian nation.

Hasina has ordered the army to join the search for the mutineers, and has also sought help from the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and British police.

"We have given the rebels who fled 24 hours to surrender and that expired at 4:00 pm Sunday, so I have summoned the army and other forces to hunt them," the prime minister told parliament late Sunday.

Hasina said arrest warrants had been issued for 1,000 mutineers and accomplices "who organised cars, boats to help (the mutineers) flee" were also being sought.

The soldiers fled the Dhaka headquarters of the Bangladesh Rifles (BDR) on Thursday, apparently dressed as civilians, after a 33-hour mutiny which turned the capital into a battle zone.

They left behind gruesome scenes with dozens of bodies, many mutilated by bayonets, dumped in mass graves. Some 70 senior army officers are still missing.

An armed forces spokesman said 'Operation Rebel Hunt' was under way to catch the 1,000 mutineers still at large, with 668 already arrested.

Hasina said she had contacted US Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher and would also approach Britain's Scotland Yard for help in the case, which has left the country reeling.

"I have had discussions with Richard Boucher. I told him I want FBI assistance in the probe," the prime minister said.

"I'd also like Scotland Yard to help us, and I have already sought UN support."

The revolt reportedly escalated from a dispute over pay and conditions in the BDR force, which is tasked with guarding Bangladesh's long and porous border with India.

It ended after Hasina met a group of BDR troops and threatened to use force if they did not surrender. Six of those who met the prime minister are on the wanted list for the killing spree.

The government, which took power in January after two years of army rule, has said it will set up a special tribunal to try those behind the killings, with some facing execution by hanging.

The prime minister, 61, initially declared an amnesty for those who surrendered, but later said those who committed murder would be punished.

Most of the 78 bodies recovered were found in graves concealed under leaves and loose dirt in the BDR compound. The force's chief and his wife were among the dead.

Divers pulled some bodies from underground sewers and an operation was under way to flush out the compound's drainage system to check for further corpses.

The violence was extreme even in a country whose short history is steeped in political bloodshed, coups and counter-coups since the brutal 1971 war of independence from Pakistan.

Hasina's own family was decimated in a 1975 coup with her father Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Bangladesh's first head of state, killed along with his wife and three sons. Hasina and her sister were out of the country at the time.
 
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