Bissau (AFP) - West African
nations on Sunday warned the army to stay out of Guinea Bissau's
consitutional crisis, saying only dialogue would end the standoff
between its president and the
premier he sacked.
Domingos Simoes Pereira on Wednesday over a series of disputes including the naming of a
new army chief.
Senegal's President
Macky Sall, who heads ECOWAS, the Economic Community of West
African
States which groups 15 countries, appealed for talks between the two men
to end
weeks of tension.
and the armed forces to respect their undertakings to stay out of politics".
On Saturday, the ruling PAIGC party renominated Pereira as prime minister just three days
after he was sacked. So far, Vaz has not reacted to the move.
The UN Security Council, which met over the unfolding crisis on Friday, also stressed that
the army must stay out of it. A 2012 military coup threw Guinea-Bissau into chaos and it hasbarely begun to recover following last year's election.
Vaz
said his dispute with the premier stemmed partly from the appointment
of a new armed
forces chief, a key post in the small nation known as a
hub in drug trafficking between South
America and Europe.
In
a unanimous statement, the 15-member UN Security Council urged all
sides to "resolve
the ongoing political dispute in the interest of peace
in Guinea-Bissau."
in the political situation.