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Luís Cabral

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Luís Cabral
Luís Cabral at the wedding party of Chico Mendes in Ziguinchor, Senegal (1973)
1st President of Guinea-Bissau
In office
24 September 1973 – 14 November 1980
Prime MinisterFrancisco Mendes
Preceded byOffice created
Succeeded byJoão Bernardo Vieira President of Guinea-Bissau
Personal details
Born
Luís Severino de Almeida Cabral

11 April 1931
Bissau, Portuguese Guinea
Died30 May 2009(2009-05-30) (aged 78)
Torres Vedras, Portugal
Cause of deathCardiac Arrest
Resting placeCemitério do Alto de São João[1]
Political partyAfrican Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde
SpouseLucete Cabral

Luís Severino de Almeida Cabral (11 April 1931 – 30 May 2009)[2][3][4] was a Bissau-Guinean politician who was the first President of Guinea-Bissau. He served from 1974 to 1980, when a military coup d'état led by João Bernardo Vieira deposed him. Luís Cabral was a half-brother of Amílcar Cabral, with whom he co-founded the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) in 1956.

Early life

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Luís Cabral was born in the city of Bissau, Portuguese Guinea, on April 11, 1931, to mestiço (mixed-race) parents originally from the Cape Verde. He completed his primary school studies in the Cape Verde archipelago, which was also a Portuguese territory at that time. Later he received training in accountancy.[5] He was also educated in Bissau and joined a Portuguese business, Companhia União Fabril.[6]

Pro-independence guerrilla and Presidency

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In 1956 Cabral was one of the six founders of the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC). In the early 1960s, PAIGC launched an anti-colonial guerrilla war against the Portuguese authorities. He helped organize a dock strike that was brutally suppressed by the Portuguese authorities. and resulted in a loss of more than 50 lives. This led to the PAIGC abandoning non-violence, which came as a shock to Cabral.[7] Luís Cabral's rise to leadership began in 1973, after the assassination in Conakry, Guinea, of his half-brother Amílcar Cabral, the noted Pan-African intellectual and founder of the PAIGC. Leadership of the party then engaged in fighting for independence from Portuguese rule for both Guinea-Bissau (then known as Portuguese Guinea) and for Cape Verde, fell to Aristides Pereira, who later became the president of Cape Verde. The Guinea-Bissau branch of the party, however, followed Luís Cabral.

Following the Carnation Revolution in April 1974 in Lisbon, the new left-wing revolutionary government of Portugal granted independence to Portuguese Guinea, as Guinea-Bissau, on September 10 that same year. The PAIGC had unilaterally proclaimed the country's independence one year before in the village of Madina do Boé, and this event had been recognized by many socialist and non-aligned member states of the United Nations. Luís Cabral became President of Guinea-Bissau. A program of national reconstruction and development, of socialist inspiration (with the support of USSR, China, but also Nordic countries), began. Access to education and health has improved significantly in a few years.[8] But some suspicion and instability was present in the party since Amílcar Cabral's death and the independence. Relations with Portugal after independence were relatively good. The Guinean president visited Portugal in 1978 and President Ramalho Eanes visited the former colony the next year, referring to the Luso-Guinean relationship as a model for those Portugal sought to establish with Angola and Mozambique.

Some sections of the party accused Luís Cabral and the other members with Cape Verdean origins of dominating the party. Alleging this, Cabral's Prime Minister and former armed forces commander João Bernardo Vieira organized his overthrow on November 14, 1980, in a military coup. Luís Cabral was then arrested and detained for 13 months.

Exile

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After the military coup in 1980, he was sent into exile, first in Cuba, which offered to receive him, then (in 1984), in Portugal, where the Portuguese Government received him and gave him measure to live with his family, until his death in 2009.

Shortly after being appointed Prime Minister following the Guinea-Bissau Civil War, Francisco Fadul called for Cabral's return from exile in December 1998. Cabral said in response, in the Portuguese newspaper 24 Horas, that he would be willing to return, but not while Vieira remained in power; Vieira had said that he could not guarantee Cabral's safety, and Cabral said that as a result, he feared for his life should he return while Vieira remained president.[9] On October 22, 1999, following Vieira's ouster, coup leader Ansumane Mane invited Cabral to return, giving him a passport marking him as "President of the Guinea Bissau Council of State" while in Lisbon.[10] Cabral was in Bissau in mid-November 1999, and said on the occasion that he did not want to become active in politics again or to rejoin PAIGC.[11]

Death

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Cabral died aged 78 on May 30, 2009, in Torres Vedras, Portugal. His death followed a long bout of illness.

The National Assembly of Guinea-Bissau stated: "It is with shock and sadness that the government and people of Guinea-Bissau have learnt of the loss of one of their most illustrious sons, Luis Cabral".[12][13] It held an emergency session at which it organised a period of national mourning to last three days.[12][14]

Controversies

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As the President of Guinea-Bissau, his authoritarian single-party regime[15] was severely repressive and the country was hit by severe food shortages. Luís Cabral was also accused of being responsible for the execution of a large number of black Guinea-Bissauan soldiers who had fought alongside the Portuguese Army against the PAIGC guerrillas during the Portuguese Colonial War, a claim that Cabral always denied.[5][16]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Na Hora do Adeus a Luís Cabral, O Simbolismo da Solidariedade e da Multiculturalidade". Archived from the original on 2021-04-11. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  2. ^ Guiné Bissau Morreu Luís Cabral, primeiro presidente do país - Expresso.pt Archived 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine (in Portuguese)
  3. ^ Morreu Luís Cabral, primeiro presidente do país - RTP Notícias Archived 2011-10-02 at the Wayback Machine (in Portuguese)
  4. ^ Guiné-Bissau: Morreu Luís Cabral, primeiro presidente do país - JN Archived 2009-06-10 at the Wayback Machine (in Portuguese)
  5. ^ a b (in Portuguese) Morreu Luís Cabral, primeiro presidente da Guiné-Bissau independente Archived 2009-06-11 at the Wayback Machine, in Público (May 31, 2009)
  6. ^ "Luís Cabral". The Guardian. 8 June 2009. Archived from the original on 24 August 2017. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  7. ^ Brockman, Norbert (2006). An African Biographical Dictionary. Grey House Publishing. pp. 102. ISBN 1592371124.
  8. ^ "Tobias Engel, A sina da instabilidade, biblioteca diplo". Archived from the original on 2022-03-03. Retrieved 2022-03-03.
  9. ^ "GUINEA-BISSAU: Former leader ready to return home" Archived 2009-06-10 at the Wayback Machine, IRIN, December 8, 1998.
  10. ^ "Guinea Bissau's first president invited to return from exile", RTP Internacional TV, Lisbon (nl.newsbank.com), October 22, 1999.
  11. ^ "Guinea-Bissau: Former President Cabral returns home 19 years after being ousted", Diario de Noticias web site (nl.newsbank.com), November 15, 1999.
  12. ^ a b "Guinea-Bissau's first leader dies". BBC News. 2009-06-02. Archived from the original on 2009-06-05. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  13. ^ "Guinea-Bissau's first president dies in Portugal". Xinhua News Agency. 2009-05-31. Archived from the original on 2009-06-10. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  14. ^ "Guinea Bissau to mourn first president". AfricaNews. 2009-06-02. Archived from the original on 2009-06-03. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  15. ^ Widening trajectories: Guinea Bissau and Cape Verde since independence, Norrie MacQueen Archived 2015-04-23 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ A history of postcolonial Lusophone Africa, A history of postcolonial Lusophone Africa, Patrick Chabal, Edition: C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, 2002, ISBN 1-85065-594-4, ISBN 978-1-85065-594-7
Political offices
New title President of Guinea-Bissau
1974–1980
Succeeded by