Tag: Alpha Conde

  • Army coup leaders in Guinea summon ministers after Conde’s ouster

    Army coup leaders in Guinea summon ministers after Conde’s ouster

    Soldiers who ousted Guinean President Alpha Conde summoned his ministers and top government officials to a meeting on Monday, a day after a coup that drew international condemnation.

    A spokesman for the army unit told state television that failure to attend the 1100 GMT meeting would be considered a “rebellion”.

    The takeover in the West African country that holds the world’s largest bauxite reserves, an ore used to produce aluminium, sent prices of the metal skyrocketing to a 10-year high on Monday over fears of further supply disruption in the downstream market.

    There was no indication of such disruption yet.

    Light traffic resumed, and some shops reopened around the main administrative district of Kaloum in Conakry which witnessed heavy gunfire throughout Sunday as the special forces battled soldiers loyal to Conde.

    A military spokesman said on television that land air borders had also been reopened.

    However, uncertainty remains. The elite unit appeared to have Conde in detention, telling the West African country on state television that they had dissolved the government and suspended the constitution.

    Other branches of the army are yet to publicly comment.

    The special forces unit is led by former French foreign legionnaire officer, Col. Mamady Doumbouya, who said on state television on Sunday that “poverty and endemic corruption” had driven his forces to remove Conde from office.

    The apparent coup has been met by condemnation from some of Guinea’s strongest allies.

    The United Nations quickly denounced the takeover, and both the African Union and West Africa’s regional bloc have threatened sanctions.

    In an overnight statement, the U.S. State Department said that violence and extra-constitutional measures could erode Guinea’s prospects for stability and prosperity.

    “These actions could limit the ability of the United States and Guinea’s other international partners to support the country,” the statement said.

    Regional experts say, however, that unlike in landlocked Mali where neighbours and partners were able to pressure a junta there after a coup, leverage on the military in Guinea could be limited because it is not landlocked, also because it is not a member of the West African currency union.

    Although mineral wealth has fuelled economic growth during Conde’s reign, few citizens significantly benefited, contributing to pent-up frustration among millions of jobless youths.

    Despite an overnight curfew, the headquarters of Conde’s presidential guard was looted by people who made off with rice, cans of oil, air conditioners, and mattresses, a Reuters correspondent said.

  • Guinea President, Alpha Conde Receives COVID-19 Vaccine

    Guinea President, Alpha Conde Receives COVID-19 Vaccine

    The 82-year-old president of Guinea, Alpha Conde, has received his first dose of a vaccine against the coronavirus, part of a scheme mainly involving government members, a source close to his office said Saturday.

    Defence minister Mohamed Diane, a scientist by training, was the first in the country to get a jab of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine on December 30.

    The source said Conde received the Sputnik V vaccine on Friday.

    Several other government members who have not so far contracted the virus have also been inoculated over the past two weeks, a spokesman for the national health security agency said.

    Guinea has received 60 doses of Sputnik V and authorities intend to inoculate a small number of elderly volunteers first before deciding whether to extend the programme.

    “More than 2.5 million vaccine doses are expected before the end of the first quarter, which would enable us to inoculate a good number of people, certainly those who want it,” said health agency spokesman, Sory Keira, without specifying whether the doses consisted solely of the Russian-developed jab.

    The impoverished African country has so far registered more than 14,000 infections and 81 deaths linked to the novel coronavirus, including a number of politicians.

    The outbreak coincided with months of political crisis caused by Conde’s decision to run for his third consecutive term as president.

    Conde won the October election against a backdrop of violence, with dozens killed during clashes between protesters and security forces.

    Critics accuse him of cracking down on dissent and breaking the country’s constitutional two-term presidential limit.

    The coronavirus pandemic comes on the heels of the 2014-2016 West Africa Ebola epidemic, which killed around 2,500 people in the nation of some 13 million people.

  • Guinean president, Alpha Condé, ‘snubs’ Bissau counterpart

    Guinean president, Alpha Condé, ‘snubs’ Bissau counterpart

    The President of Guinea-Bissau, Umaru Cisoko Emballo, was not invited to Tuesday’s inauguration of President Alpha Conde because of “his lack of courtesy” to the Guinean head of state, the Minister-Secretary General of the Guinean Presidency, Kiridi Bangoura, said on Monday.

    According to the minister, who is also chairman of the inauguration sub-commission, Guinea has a problem of courtesy and diplomatic practice with Guinea-Bissau.

    He told the media that this had “crossed the limits that govern the principles of good neighbourliness and the principles enshrined in the Vienna Convention of 1951”.

    The president of Guinea-Bissau, known to be close to Mamadou Cellou Dalein Diallo, the main challenger of President Conde, has on several occasions condemned the third-term project of President Conde.

    President Emballo also reproached President Conde, who had been appointed by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to mediate between Guinea-Bissau’s political actors, for trying to eliminate him from the political game to the benefit of his opponents.

    Well-informed sources in the Guinean capital say that the Congolese president, Denis Sassou Nguesso, who is very close to the two presidents, is expected at the inauguration and will try to iron out their differences.

  • Court confirms Alpha Conde legitimate winner of Guinea presidential poll

    Court confirms Alpha Conde legitimate winner of Guinea presidential poll

    President of Guinea’s Constitutional Court (CC) Mohamed Lamine Bangoura has confirmed the election of President Alpha Conde for a disputed third term.

    Bangoura made the confirmation on Saturday during the court’s public hearing.

    According to Bangoura, Alpha Conde, the candidate of the ruling party RPG (Rally of the Guinean People) won the electoral ballot with about 59.50 percent of the votes.

    His main opponent, Cellou Dalein Diallo, president of the Union of Democratic Forces of Guinea, won some 33.49 percent of the votes.

    The president of the CC said that the October 18 ballot was regular and thus declared President Alpha Conde elected president of Guinea.

    The turnout in the presidential election was estimated at about 78.88 percent.

    A total of 12 candidates contested in the presidential election on Oct. 18.

  • Guinean President, Alpha Condé orders 24 hours special prayers for Buhari

    Guinean President, Alpha Condé, asked all Muslims in the country to hold a 24-hour prayer for President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday.

    Condé gave this order while addressing the country’s Council of Ministers in a meeting on Thursday.

    At the meeting, the Guinean President expressed concern for his Nigerian counterpart’s health and afterward declared that Friday be devoted to prayers for Buhari’s quick recovery.

    According to an online platform, www.guineenews.org, Condé said Buhari was expected to visit Guinea in March, but was unable to do so because of his health.

    As a result, the Guinean President asked that prayers be held in all mosques in the country in what he described as a day of prayers for Buhari.

    About 85 per cent of the Guinean population (11 million) are Muslims; eight per cent are Christians; while seven per cent are traditionalists.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that President Buhari traveled for medical check-up in London on Sunday, May 7, more than a month he came back into the country from a previous medical vacation.

    His long absence from work had intensified calls for his health status to be made public, while several Nigerians had called for his resignation.

    A suit had been filed before the Federal High Court in Abuja asking for an order compelling the Federal Executive Council to declare the ailing President as unfit to continue to hold office and another suit mandating the National Assembly to constitute a medical panel to verify the President’s fitness.

    The suit, marked FHC/ABJ/CS/671/2017, was filed on Thursday by the incorporated trustees of a civil society group, Kingdom Human Rights Foundation International.

    In February 2017, Muslims in major state capitals and towns in the North had also held marathon prayers for the quick recovery of President Buhari.

    The special prayer sessions were held at various Eid prayer grounds in Nasarawa, Kano, Kaduna, Katsina and Kwara states.