A Guinean government
delegation has met opposition leader Cellou Dalein Diallo at his home for
talks, ahead of fresh protests due Monday calling for a disputed electoral
timetable to be scrapped.
A statement released
Sunday by the delegation, headed by justice minister Cheick Sako, said their first
meeting in almost 18 months had "relaunched a dialogue" with former
prime minister Diallo. "This step was
intended to reiterate to the opposition the government's willingness to revive
the dialogue (which is) the only route that ends with a calmer political
climate and inclusive elections," the statement said.
AFP reports:
Opposition leader, Diallo confirmed he had
received the group of senior officials but emphasized that cancelling protests
planned for Monday was "out of the question" without the guaranteed
implementation of a 2013 agreement stipulating that local elections take place
before a presidential contest.
The protesters were due
to march on the headquarters of Guinea's national electoral commission on
Monday.
Supporters of Diallo's
Union of Democratic Forces of Guinea have rallied in recent days over the
electoral timetable, which they claim has been pushed through without
consultation and gives the ruling party an unfair advantage.
They are also angry about
the fragile security situation in the West African nation, which they blame on
President Alpha Condé's regime.
Hundreds of youths hurled
stones at police who responded with tear gas and warning shots in two days of
violence on April 13 and 14, bringing traffic to a standstill on a main highway
into central Conakry, Guinea's capital.
The opposition said three
people were killed, including an unidentified young girl, and 50 wounded -- at
least 12 by gunfire -- during the clashes. The government put the number of
dead at two with "dozens" injured.
The meeting between
Diallo and the delegation took place just hours after the funeral of one of the
opposition protesters killed last week.
The opposition has accused
Condé of using the Ebola epidemic as an excuse to postpone voting and has
called on supporters to back its demand to bring forward local elections due in
March next year.
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