Francisco Mendes | |
---|---|
1st Prime Minister of Guinea-Bissau | |
In office September 24, 1973 – July 7, 1978 |
|
President | Luís Cabral |
Succeeded by | Constantino Teixeira |
Personal details | |
Born |
Enxude, Guinea-Bissau |
7 February 1939
Died | 7 July 1978 | (aged 39)
Political party | PAIGC |
Occupation | Politician |
Francisco Mendes, nom de guerre Chico Té (Enxude, Guinea-Bissau, February 7, 1939 – July 7, 1978) was a Guinea-Bissau politician. He was the country's first Prime Minister and held that position from September 24, 1973 until his fatal car accident under suspicious circumstances on July 7, 1978.
In the early 1960s PAIGC launched an armed struggle against Portuguese imperialism which would last more than a decade. Mendes was one of the few Guinea-Bissau students in secondary education when he abandoned school to join the PAIGC. He rose through the ranks in the 1960s, becoming a political commissar of the Bafatá area in 1962. In the years 1963 - 1964 he held the same function on the Northern Front. He entered the Political Bureau in 1964 and he became a member of PAIGC’s Council of War in 1965. In 1967 he was appointed delegate of the Council for the Northern Front.
After negotiations between Portugal and PAIGC in early 1974, Portugal granted independence to Guinea-Bissau despite PAIGC having declared unilateral independence nearly a year prior. The PAIGC-led government was headed by Luís Cabral, half-brother of the PAIGC co-founder Amílcar Cabral whose assassination in Conakry on January 20, 1973 remains a mystery. Francisco Mendes was elected the country's first Prime Minister as Comissário Principal and in this role in the newly UN-member, Francisco Mendes was responsible for a series of socialism-inspired development programs, and a four-year drive toward national reconciliation. Mendes' signature graced the first four banknotes (10, 50, 100 and 500 peso) issued in 1976 in Guinea-Bissau.
Although the causes behind his death on July 7, 1978 are still disputed, it is mostly accepted that PAIGC was involved in it. A widely accepted theory – though unverifiable as of 2006 – is that dissent among PAIGC leadership may have led to his assassination.