:''This article is about the former President of Guinea-Bissau. For the evangelist of this name, see
Luis Cabral.''
'Luís de Almeida Cabral' (born
10 April 1931), the first
President of
Guinea-Bissau, served from
1973 to
1980, when a military ''
coup d'état'' deposed him.
In the early
1960s, the
African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) launched an anti-colonial war that eventually expelled the
Portuguese authorities. 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
Portugal's revolution in April
1974, it granted independence to Guinea-Bissau on
September 10 that same year, although the PAIGC had unilaterally proclaimed the country's independence one year before, and 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. But some suspicion and instability was present in the party since
Amílcar Cabral's death and the independence. Some sections of the party accused Luís Cabral and the other members with Cape Verdean origins of dominating the party. So, alleging this, Cabral's minister and former armed forces commander
João Bernardo Vieira organized his overthrow in late
1980 in a military ''coup''.
Luís Cabral was then arrested and detained for 13 months. Afterwards, he was sent into exile, first in
Cuba, which offered to receive him, then (in
1984), in
Portugal, where the government received him and gave him conditions to live with his family, until today. In
1999, after an absence of almost twenty years, he managed to visit his homeland again, after
João Bernardo Vieira himself was overthrown from power.
See also
★
History of Guinea-Bissau