He joined that time with Miguel Trovoada, Leonel Mário d'Alva, Filinto Costa Alegre and António Barreto Pires dos Santos (Oné).
He reunited them for sometimes, in mid-1958 in Bobô-Forro (southwest of the city, now part of Me-Zochi) and other times in Boa Morte, he concorded for the creation of a convergence of struggle[1] which would be the fruit of the Committee for the Liberation of São Tomé and Príncipe (CLSTP), the predecessor of MLSTP (Movimento de Libertação de São Tomé e Príncipe).
In 1972 at the heat of the Portuguese Colonial War, CLSTP which was founded in 1960 in Casablanca, Morocco was disorganized by Miguel Trovoada who was secretary-general and wholly left office.
Later at a meeting in Accra in Ghana, the house which Ceita lived, together with his wife and also Virgilio Carvalho, Hugo de Menezes and António Tomás Medeiros, it was delined and CLSTP became MLSTP.
[1] With Manuel Pinto da Costa, who became secretary-general of the movement, he sought to dispel influence from older leaders of MLSTP as well as Ceita.