Global Upfront Newspapers
AfricaCoverNewsPolitics

Guinea Junta Leader Decides On 39-Month Transition

Colonel Mamady Doumbouya, the head of Guinea’s military junta, said Saturday he had opted for a 39-month transitional period before a return to civilian rule.

He made the announcement in a speech broadcast on television, saying the National Transition Council (CNT) would put the proposal to parliament.

The announcement came after the creation of what the regime has described as an “inclusive consultation framework” in April.

That culminated in a conference boycotted by several prominent political groups.

On Friday, the army-dominated government said that the forum considering the issue had considered a transition period of 18-52 months.

Doumbouya, in Saturday’s speech, described the period he had opted for as the “median proposal.”

Regional bloc ECOWAS had set last Monday as a deadline for putting forward an “acceptable” transition timetable or risk economic and financial sanctions.

Guinea’s ruling military junta let the deadline pass, however, asking the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) for more time for consultations to continue.

ECOWAS has called for an “acceptable” timeline for a return to civilian rule, failing which it has threatened to extend sanctions applied to Guinea following the military coup there.

Growing discontent

In September 2021, army officers led by Colonel Mamady Doumbouya ousted elected president Alpha Conde in the impoverished former French colony.

Conde, 84, had drawn fierce opposition after he pushed through a new constitution in 2020 that allowed him to run for a third presidential term.

Following the coup, ECOWAS called for a return to civilian rule within six months.

Although many Guineans initially welcomed the coup, there is growing discontent against the junta in the nation of 13 million people.

Guinea’s coup last September came on the heels of a military takeover in Mali.

ECOWAS has applied sanctions on members of the Mali junta, shut its borders with the country, frozen its assets at the Central Bank of West African States and imposed a trade embargo.

For Guinea, leading junta members have been sanctioned and are subject to a travel ban within the bloc.

A third ECOWAS member, Burkina Faso, experienced a coup in January.

It has so far escaped the sanctions handed out to Guinea and Mali but was also given until last Monday to spell out an “acceptable transition timetable.”

The Burkinabe junta has said it stands by a three-year schedule for holding elections, arguing that it first has to deal with a bloody jihadist insurgency.

Advertize With Us

See Also

Russia Issues Arrest Warrant For U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham After Ukraine Comments

Global Upfront

Buhari Mourns Methodist Church Prelate Emeritus, Sunday Mbang

Global Upfront

Hunger: Hoodlums Loot Truckload of Spaghetti In Dogarawa, Along Zaria-Kano Expressway

Global Upfront

Bullied Lead British International School, Abuja Student Sues School For N500 Million, Public Apology

Global Upfront

Wole Soyinka: Reopen All Closed Cases Of Religious Extra-judicial Killings In Nigeria, Grant Public Holiday For Traditionalists

Global Upfront

Terrorism: Nigerian Military Declares Simon Ekpa, Agbo, Aliero, 94 Others Wanted

Global Upfront

Crisis: Taliban government offers Afghans wheat for work as money dwindles

Global Upfront

Statement On U.S. Disengagement From Niger Republic With American Air Force C-17 Globemaster III From Niamey’s Air Base 101 – AFRICOM

Global Upfront

Senator Ubah: How I Narrowly Escaped Assassins’ Bullets

Global Upfront

After Long Years Of Disbandment, P-Square Rock Fans On Their 100-city World Tour – Africamusic

Global Upfront

This website uses Cookies to improve User experience. We assume this is OK...If not, please opt-out! Accept Read More