Guinea Conakry Democratic Governance, a History
By Sekou Traore
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Guinea Conakry Democratic Governance, a History - Sekou Traore
Guinea Conakry Democratic Governance, a History.
Political Conflict and Ethnic Influences
____________________
Author
Sekou Traore
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First Printing: 2017
ISBN: 978-1-365-71265-4
Printed in the United States of America
Publisher by Victoria General Printing, LTD.
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Guinea Conakry
What's the political situation in Guinea?
Later Instant
Guinea, officially known as the Republic of Guinea (French: République de Guinée) is a country in West Africa formerly known as French Guinea (Guinée française). It is sometimes called Guinea-Conakry to distinguish it from its neighbour Guinea Bissau.
Conakry, its largest city and national capital has a population of 1,548,500.
With an area of almost 246,000 square kilometers Guinea forms a rough crescent from its western border on the Atlantic Ocean curving towards the east and south. It shares its northern border with Guinea-Bissau, Senegal and Mali, and a southern border with Sierra Leone, Liberia and Cote d'Ivoire.
Until France colonized it in the 1890s, the land that is now Guinea belonged to a series of African empires. After gaining independence from France on 2 October 1958, Guinea experienced autocratic rule, until October 2008, when a military junta seized control. In January 2010, the junta appointed a Prime Minister to head a six- month transitional government leading up to elections.
The first round of the presidential election held in June 2010 was billed as the first free and fair election since independence in 1958. Due to allegations of electoral fraud, the second round was postponed until September 2010, followed by a further two delays.
Finally, on 7 November 2010, the second round of the presidential election was held. The election ran smoothly, voter turnout was high and when counting was completed on 16 November, 2010, Alpha Condé was declared the victor.
The 50 odd years of political turmoil and civil unrest in Guinea since independence in 1958 are compounded by Guinea's ethnic diversity.
There are about 24 distinct ethnic groups in Guinea of which the largest, alternately known as Fulas, Fulani or Peulh comprise 40% of the population. They are mainly found in the Futa Jallon region.
The second largest ethnic group, the Mandika, Mandingo or Malinke, comprise 25% of the population and are mostly found in the Kankan and Kissidougou prefectures of eastern Guinea.
The third largest ethnic group, the Soussou, comprise 10% of the population and are mainly found in the western regions in and around the capital, Conakry. The remaining 10% of the population includes the Kpelle, Kissi, Ziako, Toma and others, while the 10,000 odd non-Africans include Lebanese, French and other European nationals.
Immediately after the recent presidential elections, the nation was plagued by ethnic violence between supporters - often unemployed, disaffected youths - of the two major contenders. Shops were looted, houses and buildings damaged or destroyed and people seriously injured and killed. Many women were raped.
As a result of civil wars in Sierra Leone and Liberia in the early years of the new millennium, Guinea is hosting nearly one million refugees from Sierra Leone and Liberia alone. Another influx followed the 2002 conflict in Cote d'Ivoire. Such numbers of displaced persons is a tremendous burden on the host population. Gradually, they are spreading throughout the country.
On first entering Guinea, many refugees were concentrated in Nzérékoré, capital of the Nzérékoré Prefecture and the largest city in the Guinée Forestière region of south- eastern Guinea. The population of 107,329 according to the 1996 census rose to nearly 300,000 after the civil wars in Liberia and Cote d'Ivoire.
Although travel briefs strongly advise tourists to stay away from the southeastern border regions, the recent spate of mutilations, murders, rapes and property damage that occurred in many parts of Guinea were the results of inter-ethnic rivalries and rarely if ever involved tourists.
Poverty and desperation breed banditry. Because banditry is rife in these forested border regions, tourists should avoid remote locations where Guinean civil authorities exert little or no influence.
The large military presence in Conakry is both an inconvenience and a hidden blessing. On the one hand, one might resent the inconvenience of frequent roadblocks. On the other hand, the large military presence ensures that inter-ethnic tensions are held in check and foreign tourists are relatively undisturbed.
To avoid getting caught up in the crossfire resulting from inter-ethnic or political violence, keep away from large crowds at political rallies and street demonstrations.
5 things you should know about Guinea’s election
1. Incumbent Alpha Condé was the first president in Guinea to come to power (in 2010) through a democratic election.
At independence from France in 1958, Guinea was led by Ahmed Sékou Touré, who went on to win
uncontested presidential elections from 1961 to 1982. Days after Sékou Touré died in 1984, Lansana Conté took power in a military coup and won three multiparty elections in what observers described as a facade
of democracy.
Days after Conté died in 2008, Capt. Moussa Dadis Camara took power in a military coup. Following a massacre of opposition members in a meeting in 2009, one of Camara’s aides shot him in the head. Camara survived and went into exile. Condé won the multiparty presidential election that followed in 2010.
2. Sunday’s election was the fourth presidential contest Condé has competed in, but the first time he has run as an incumbent.
Condé, 77, has been in politics for a long time, but the presidential term he is finishing is the first political office he has ever held. As an opposition activist during Sékou Touré’s rule, he was sentenced to death in absentia. He placed second and third in presidential elections that