Lesotho Prime Minister Tom Thabane claimed Saturday he fled in fear of his life after soldiers seized power in a coup, despite the military denying it overthrew the tiny mountain kingdom's government. Powerful neighbour South Africa and the Commonwealth backed Thabane's claims, with Johannesburg warning the Basotho army that such action "shall not be tolerated".
"I have been removed from control not by the people but by the armed forces, and that is illegal," Thabane told the BBC. "I came into South Africa this morning and I will return as soon as my life is not in danger," he said. "I will not go back to Lesotho to get killed." Lesotho's military seized control of police headquarters and the premier's residence in the capital Maseru in the early hours of Saturday, but later withdrew, sports minister and leader of the Basotho National Party, Thesele Maseribane told AFP.
"The (military) commander said he was looking for me, the prime minister and the deputy prime minister to take us to the king. In our country, that means a coup," he said. But military spokesman Major Ntele Ntoi denied the claims, saying soldiers had merely disarmed police before returning to their barracks. "There has never been and there will never be a coup in Lesotho perpetrated by the military," he told South Africa's ANN7 television news channel.
"The military embarked on an operation to disarm the police, who, according to the intelligence gathered by the military, were arranging to arm some of the political sides in Lesotho," he said. Police officers locked up and left their headquarters after the military raid, a witness said. Heavily armed security forces were driving police cars through the city in the afternoon, according to an AFP correspondent.
An AFP photographer was pursued and his camera smashed after taking pictures of soldiers. The putsch comes just months after a power struggle in the landlocked country that describes itself as the "kingdom in the sky". Maseribane said people with guns were roaming the city but that he had no information about casualties, accusing the military of jamming radio stations and phone networks.
He accused Deputy Prime Minister Mothetjoa Metsing, leader of coalition partner Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD), of involvement in the move to seize power. "There is some intelligence that he is part (of the coup)," he said. An aide who answered Metsing's phone told AFP the deputy premier was at a funeral service outside Maseru and unaware of the events.
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