Categories: News

Guinea Coup Leader Sworn In As Interim President

Guinea has sworn in Colonel Mamady Doumbouya as interim president, who promised to respect the West African state’s international commitments while transitioning to civilian rule.

Doumbouya, who led the overthrow of President Alpha Conde on September 5, was sworn in on Friday by Supreme Court head Mamadou Sylla for a transition period of unspecified length.

The new interim president spoke of his commitment that neither he nor any member of the military government would stand in any future elections that the military has promised to organise after the transition period.

He said further that, “his administration’s mission is to reform the state, by drafting a new constitution, fighting corruption, reforming the electoral system and then organising free, credible and transparent elections”.

He once again said nothing at the time of his swearing-in about how long he will remain the interim leader.

Wearing a beige uniform and red beret, the new national leader also vowed to loyally preserve national sovereignty and to consolidate democratic achievements, guarantee the independence of the fatherland and the integrity of the national territory.

The ceremony was held at the Mohammed-V palace in Conakry on the eve of a public holiday celebrating the 1958 declaration of independence from France.

Doumbouya will serve as transitional president until the country returns to civilian rule, according to a blueprint unveiled by the military government on Monday that does not mention a timeline.

The September 5 coup, the latest bout of turbulence in one of Africa’s most volatile countries, saw the overthrow of 83-year-old President Conde.

Conde became Guinea’s first democratically elected president in 2010 and was re-elected in 2015.

But last year, he pushed through a controversial new constitution that allowed him to run for a third term in October 2020.

The charter unveiled on Monday promises that a new constitution will be drafted and “free, democratic and transparent” elections held, but does not spell out how long the transition will last.

The document says the transitional president will be the “head of state and supreme chief of the armed forces … [and] determines the policies of the Nation”, with the power to name and fire an interim prime minister.

However, the president will be barred from being a candidate at the elections that will take place after the transition, it says.

The turbulence in the former French colony has sparked deep concern among Guinea’s neighbours.

The coup is the second to take place in the region, after Mali, in less than 13 months.

The region’s bloc, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), is demanding that elections be held within six months, as well as Conde’s release.

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