French President Francois
Hollande (left) greets his Guinean counterpart Alpha Condé on April 22, 2015 in
Paris ©Patrick Kovarik (AFP)
|
Guinea's
opposition leader pledged to continue the protests in which at least four
people have been killed unless President Alpha Condé allows prompt local
elections.
Cellou Dalien Diallo said Condé had broken a 2013
U.N.-brokered deal with the opposition to organize long-overdue municipal polls
before a presidential vote set for October.
The opposition accuses Condé of packing local
authorities with his supporters after the five-year mandate of elected
officials expired in 2010. Diallo said those officials are campaigning on Condé's
behalf, making fair elections impossible.
Reuters reports:
Before talks with Diallo on Wednesday, the
president has ruled out holding local elections before October, citing a
decision by the Independent National Electoral Commission (CENI) that doing so
would require postponing the presidential vote.
Recent protests have sparked fears of a return to
the violence of 2013. More than 50 people were killed then before legislative
elections in which Condé's RPG failed to win a majority. The violence deterred
investors from the Guinea, a former French colony of 12 million people and the
world's largest bauxite exporter.
"We will carry on with our demonstrations
because it is illegal what Condé is doing and it is unfair," Diallo said
in a weekend interview. "I will tell him that this electoral calendar
violates the constitution ... and the electoral code."
The rise in tensions comes as the country tries to
end the worst outbreak of Ebola ever recorded. The disease has killed more than
11,000 people in Guinea, neighbouring Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Politics are divided along ethnic lines. Diallo
comes from the Peulh tribe, Guinea's largest, whose control over the economy
has stirred resentment among some other ethnic groups. Condé comes from the Malinké,
the second-largest ethnic group, but has rejected accusations of exploiting
ethnicity.
Diallo has alleged fraud in the 2010 presidential
election - Guinea's first democratic vote since independence from France in 1958
- after he won 44 percent of the vote in the first round only to see Condé
snatch a surprise victory in the runoff.
"This time, the parties of the opposition will
support whichever opposition candidate reaches the second round, because we're
all fighting for change," Diallo said, adding that he was determined to
win October's vote.
The opposition protests were being fuelled by
frustration over stagnant growth, high unemployment, crumbling infrastructure
and graft, Diallo said.
The International Monetary Fund said economic
growth slowed to 1.1 percent last year and it forecast zero growth this year
amid a slump in metals prices. The finance minister told Reuters in March that
economic losses from Ebola may total US$2 billion.
Last year, Guinea ranked 145th of 175 countries in
Transparency International's rankings of corruption perceptions, an improvement
from 164th when Condé won power in 2010.
Diallo said mining investors had been deterred by
Condé's decision to hand the state a larger share of new projects.
"I would liberalize
the mining sector while protecting the interest of Guineans," said Diallo,
a trained economist. "There will be no investment if there are no profits
for investors."
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