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More Fire for the People
24th January 2007, 04:00
Union leaders in Guinea have met President Lansana Conte after being released following the worst violence so far in a two-week general strike.

A heavy security presence is reported in the capital, Conakry, and other towns following Monday's clashes in which more than 30 people were killed.

The government announced an inquiry into the violence after the talks. The strike is the third in the last year.

The strikers say President Conte is too sick to govern and want him to resign.

They also accuse Mr Conte, who is his 70s and suffers from diabetes, of mismanaging the economy and personally securing the release from prison of two men accused of corruption.

[...]

But in the towns of Dabola and Kundara several thousand people again marched on the streets calling on the president to step down.
—LINK (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6289957.stm)
Looks like a situation is building in Guinea. Any thoughts on where it is heading?

Janus
25th January 2007, 02:46
Any thoughts on where it is heading?
Things might calm down now that the president has agreed to some of the union demands.

Guinea leader cedes demands (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6296709.stm)

Nothing Human Is Alien
25th January 2007, 04:56
A short piece on it from the latest issue of The Free Press (http://www.freepeoplesmovement.org/fpm/page.php?252):

"General strike in Guinea
A general strike has continued since January 10 in Guinea, where unions are calling on president Lansana Conte, who has been in power since the 1984 coup he lead, to resign.

Thousands have taken to the streets around the country, many waving signs and singing anti-Conte slogans.

For his part, the ailing 72-year-old Conte has appealed to the military “remain united and not to follow union leaders who went beyond their brief by entering politics.”

The strikes, which have totally shut down the country’s economy, were launched after two of Conte’s associates who had been on trial for embezzlement were released.

At least 10 strikers have been murdered by government security forces since the strike started. "

It should be noted that the number is now 20.. a number of union leaders have been arrested as well.. and at least one, Ibrahim Fofanah, was tortured, to the point where one of his eyes was ripped out.

A few other interesting notes: The strike is backed by all of the main bourgeois opposition parties.. and some imperialist powers seem to be backing the push to oust Conte..

There were two sets of major strikes in 2006 as well, one over the price of rice.

Nothing Human Is Alien
26th January 2007, 03:51
59 people now reported dead.

Severian
10th February 2007, 07:14
Originally posted by Hopscotch [email protected] 23, 2007 10:00 pm
Any thoughts on where it is heading?
One hopes, to the fall of the dictatorship and to expanded political space for workers to organize. Which is especially likely if workers' actions make it fall.

Certainly the regime's feeling the heat, but apparently not ready to give up power yet.

From Yesterday's Militant (http://www.themilitant.com/2007/7107/710761.html)

Guinea general strike ends
with gov’t reshuffle

BY SAM MANUEL
WASHINGTON—An 18-day general strike in Guinea brought much of the country to a standstill, including its vast bauxite mines. The West African country is the world’s largest producer of the ore, which is used to make aluminum. The strike ended January 29, after president Lansana Conté agreed to appoint a prime minister who would form a new government.

Conté, a former army colonel, seized power in a coup shortly after the death in 1984 of the country’s first president and independence leader Ahmed Sékou Touré.

Officials of the country’s two main union federations, the Guinean Workers Union (USTG) and the National Confederation of Guinean Workers (CNTG), had demanded that Conté step aside but have accepted the compromise. No prime minister has yet been named by the president

Hundreds of Guineans living in the United States rallied here outside the White House and marched to the World Bank on January 25. Rally organizers said they hoped to pressure Washington and other governments to “help bring democracy to Guinea.” Some protesters carried signs with photos of Conté and former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein, equating the two.

Most demonstrators carried signs demanding Conté’s resignation and condemning the killing by the military of protesters in Conakry, the capital, and other Guinean cities.

“Conditions in the country have become intolerable,” said Lamin Diallo, one of the rally organizers. Diallo said nine buses had come from New York, three buses each from Boston and Ohio, and several cars and vans from Atlanta, and the metropolitan area surrounding Washington.

“Conté has squandered the wealth of the country,” Diallo said. “The regime is getting fat from the bauxite, gold, diamonds, and other minerals while the people don’t even have running water.”

Prices for alumina, which is extracted from bauxite, jumped 76 percent in Europe in January to $360 a metric ton, reported the Bloomberg News Service. While the price fell 3.4 percent on the London Metal Exchange it still stood at $2,700 a ton. During the strike, alumina prices rose 7.2 percent. Officials at the Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinee (CBG), the state bauxite company, said CBG lost about $1 million a day.

The U.S. company Alcoa, and its Canadian rival Alcan, both own stakes in CBG.

Despite its mineral resources, Guinea is among the poorest countries in Africa. The agreement to end the strike capped the price of gasoline and diesel at 4,300 Guinean francs (US 72 cents) per liter, and at 97,500 GF (US$16) for a 110-pound sack of rice. The government also agreed to stop food exports in order to increase food supplies. A provision that all assets of foreign mining companies operating in the country, including Alcoa, Alcan, and Russia’s RUSAL, be located in Guinea would be negotiated by the new prime minister.

The agreement has been signed by the head of the Supreme Court and the national assembly, union leaders, and a representative of business groups but has not been given Conté’s official seal of approval, reported Reuters.

Amadou Troaré, a 31-year-old construction worker, came here for the January 25 rally from Columbus, Ohio. “Conté must be brought to justice for the people killed by the military,” Troaré said. Guinea’s Health Ministry reported that 59 people were killed during the strike, according to the United Nations press agency. The president of Guinea’s Human Rights League put the figure at 90 dead and 300 injured.

There is no provision in the tentative agreement for an investigation into the deaths. Union leaders are demanding that January 22 be recognized as a “national day of remembrance and reconciliation” for those killed. According to the country’s health ministry, 44 were killed that day during a march in Conakry.

But today:
Guinea's president appoints new Prime Minister (http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/02/09/africa/AF-GEN-Guinea-Prime-Minister.php) and apparently it's just one of his cronies, who's been his "Minister for Presidential Affairs" previously. There isn't an immediate response from the unions but it would seem that doesn't come anywhere near the strike's goals.

combat
12th February 2007, 03:59
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1YaFhFUCfm8

Sankara1983
12th February 2007, 04:20
I hope we will soon witness the last gasps of this moth-eaten dictator's corrupt regime.

Janus
12th February 2007, 21:12
Forget reconciliation, it looks like things are heating up again and the president has declared martial law as a response.


Originally posted by Reuters
CONAKRY (Reuters) - Guinean President Lansana Conte declared martial law in the West African country on Monday to curb a wave of violent protests lead by unions opposed to his 23-year rule.

"Given the destruction and the losses in terms of human life, I have decided to decree martial law in the whole of the national territory," he said on state radio.

Martial law in Guinea forbids all public meetings, empowers the military to arrest anyone they believe threatens state security and imposes a strict curfew.

"Orders have been given to the heads of the armed forces to take all appropriate measures to defend the people of Guinea from the risk of civil war," Conte said.

At least nine people were killed on Monday, after unions resumed a general strike to protest against Conte's naming of a close ally to the post of consensus prime minister.

Union leaders said the appointment violated a power-sharing deal which ended a bloody 18-day general strike last month. Monday's strike action disrupted bauxite production from the world's largest exporter.