March 10, 2019
© EMILIE IOB/AFP/Getty Images Bissau, capital city of Guinea-Bissau
The West African state of Guinea-Bissau was holding key legislative elections on Sunday aimed at ending a protracted political crisis.
Here is some background:
Four coups
A former Portuguese colony and onetime important source of slaves for the Americas, the small country on Africa's western bulge achieved independence in 1974 after an 11-year armed struggle.
Since then it has lived through four successful military coups -- the last one in 2012 -- as well as 16 attempted, plotted or alleged coups, according to a World Bank profile.
Instability and conflict have battered infrastructure and hobbled development, leaving Guinea-Bissau one of the world's poorest states.
© Provided by AFP Map of Guinea-Bissau, where legislative elections will be held on Sunday
The current president, Jose Mario Vaz, was elected in 2014.
Vaz vowed to bring stability but the country has been in the grip of a power struggle since August 2015, when he sacked his then prime minister Domingos Simoes Pereira. He has been followed by a string of prime ministers who were unable to muster a majority in parliament.
The body did not sit for nearly two years until an accord in April 2018 that saw Aristide Gomes appointed as "consensus prime minister".
Legislative elections were set for November 2018 but were postponed until March 10.
Cocaine route
At 36,100 square kilometres (14,440 square miles), the country is slightly larger than Belgium and includes a scattering of 88 islands in the Atlantic Ocean called the Bijagos.
These islands as well as a porous coastline and chaotic administration have provided fertile ground for Latin American drug lords trafficking cocaine to Europe.
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