No. Mozambique was a former Portuguese colony.
East Timor
None.
Today, that's always a former colony. Angola is one that starts with an A; it used to be a Portuguese colony.
In Latin America, Brazil is a former colony of Portugal, and has Portuguese as its official language. In Africa, Cape Verde Islands and Guinea-Bissau likewise are former colonies, and keep Portuguese as their official languages. In Southeast Asia, East Timor is a former colony, and maintains the official status of Portuguese right alongside of the indigenous Tetum language. And in Asia, Macau is a former colony, and uses Portuguese and Chinese as official languages.
Vasco
Macau
Four countries that speak Portuguese are Portugal, whose navigators and explorers made the language known to the rest of the world; the former Asian colony of Macau, where the official languages are Chinese and Portuguese; and the former African colony of Guinea-Bissau, and the former South American colony of Brazil, both of which keep Portuguese as their official languages.
East Timor.
East Timor.
Macau, which is situated near Hong Kong.
The Republic of Guinea is not a colony; it is an independent country. It is is FORMER French colony, but it has been independent since 1958.