Son of a former Guinea-Bissau president jailed in the US
The US Justice Department stated on Tuesday that the son of a former Guinea-Bissau president had been found guilty of participating in a multinational heroin trafficking conspiracy and was facing a sentence of more than six and a half years in prison.
According to a statement made by the US Attorney for the Southern District of Texas, Malam Bacai Sanha Jr., 52, intended to use the money to finance a revolution in the West African nation that would lead to his ultimate president and construction of a “drugs regime”.
Advertisement
“Malam Bacai Sanha Jr. wasn’t any ordinary international drug trafficker,” said Douglas Williams, special agent in charge of the FBI Houston Field Office. “He is the son of the former president of Guinea-Bissau and was trafficking drugs for a very specific reason – to fund a coup.”
According to the statement, Sanha was a key player in the plot to sell heroin and organized its importation from Europe to the United States.
See also:
- Nine facts regarding the ship that caused the Baltimore Bridge to collapse
- King Charles will be present at the Easter Sunday service
He and his accomplice were taken into custody in July 2022 upon their arrival in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. Not long later, they were extradited to the United States.
Advertisement
According to the statement released on Tuesday, Sanha entered a guilty plea in September 2023 “to conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance for the purpose of unlawful importation.”
Since Guinea-Bissau separated from Portugal in 1974, there have been military takeovers interspersed with periods of democratic administration, though elected officials have been able to hold office for the entire term.
Malam Bacai Sanha, the father of Sanha, was first appointed interim leader in 1999 by a junta before losing the election the following year.
He was elected president in 2009, but before serving out his term, he passed away in January 2012 while receiving medical attention in Paris.
His son, referred to as “Bacaizinho” in Guinea-Bissau, has worked for the government in a number of capacities, most notably advising his father on economic matters.
Advertisement