Guinea-Bissau appeared calm today after the unstable West African country was shaken by an attempted coup attempt the day before.
Heavily armed men surrounded had government buildings in the capital Bissau, where President Umaro Sissoco Embalo and his prime minister were believed to have been attending a cabinet meeting.
Sissoco, 49, later told reporters that he had been unharmed during a five-hour gun battle which he described as an assassination plot. Several people were killed in the attack, the president said.
Earlier today, shops and banks had reopened in Bissau and traffic was returning to the streets.
Access to the government buildings recently attacked by gunmen was blocked by soldiers, however. Troops were also patrolling the city.
Guinea-Bissau is an impoverished coastal state of around two million people, south of Senegal, and is notoriously unstable.
The former Portuguese colony has seen four military putsches since gaining independence in 1974, most recently in 2012.
In 2014, the country vowed to return to democracy, but it has enjoyed little stability since and the armed forces wield substantial clout.
The country suffers from endemic corruption. It is also known as a hub for cocaine trafficking between Latin America and Europe.