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Guinea interim assembly holds first post-coup session
By Mouctar Bah and Alpha Assia Balde
Conakry (AFP) Feb 6, 2022

Diplomats in Burkina vow to help 'restore security'
Ouagadougou (AFP) Feb 4, 2022 - Diplomats in Burkina Faso on Friday said they would help the junta that seized power last month restore security to the jihadist-wracked country, the Chinese ambassador announced on their behalf.

The junta's leader Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba has in the past week been in talks with international organisations and donors after ousting president Roch Marc Christian Kabore on January 24.

Kabore's toppling came after public anger over his handling of a jihadist insurgency in the impoverished country that has claimed more than 2,000 lives and displaced 1.5 million since 2015.

Diplomats representing China, the European Union, France and neighbouring Mali on Friday met Damiba.

Chinese ambassador Li Jian said after the meeting that those who attended would contribute to restoring security in the country.

"We will make our contribution, we will walk together in a spirit of solidarity and brotherhood so that (Burkina Faso) can restore peace and security as soon as possible," he said, without providing more details.

Mali is also ruled by a military junta following two coups since August 2020 and battling jihadists on its soil.

France has around 4,000 troops deployed across West Africa's Sahel region to fight the jihadists.

W.African peacekeepers to deploy in Guinea-Bissau after coup bid
Bissau (AFP) Feb 4, 2022 - West Africa bloc ECOWAS has announced it will send a "stabilising support force" to Guinea-Bissau, where an attempted putsch this week claimed 11 lives.

After a summit on Thursday evening, the 15-nation bloc "firmly condemned the coup attempt" in the country of two million people.

It added that a "stabilising support force" would deploy to Guinea-Bissau, without offering any further details.

Guinea-Bissau's presidency declined to comment on Friday when contacted by AFP.

On Tuesday, heavily armed men attacked government buildings in the capital Bissau where President Umaro Sissoco Embalo was believed to be attending a cabinet meeting.

The 49-year-old president emerged unscathed from a five-hour gun battle, later describing the attack to reporters as a plot to wipe out the government.

Eleven people, including four civilians, were killed, according to a government spokesman.

Guinea-Bissau is notoriously unstable, having suffered four military coups since independence from Portugal in 1974, its most recent in 2012.

The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) also sent peacekeepers to the country in 2012 to guard public buildings among other duties. That force left when its mandate ended in 2020.

In 2014, Guinea-Bissau vowed to return to democracy, but it has enjoyed little stability since and the armed forces wield substantial clout.

The identity and motives of the attackers behind this week's attempted coup remain unclear. The army has launched a major probe.

Guinea-Bissau's government has also decreed a two-day period of national mourning for those killed in the attempted coup from Saturday.

Guinea's transitional assembly, which is tasked with organising a return to civilian rule after the military overthrow last year of president Alpha Conde, held its first session Saturday.

All 81 members of the national transitional council, known by its French acronym CNT, were present for the inaugural session in parliament buildings in the capital Conakry, AFP journalists said.

The session lasted several hours and was opened by CNT president Dansa Kourouma and in the presence of transitional prime minister Mohamed Beavogui, a development expert.

"The radical change in the mechanisms that bring elites to power and allows them to remain in power almost indefinitely (is a problem that) must be definitively resolved," Kourouma said in his speech.

He called for a constitution to be drawn up "that will not be easily modified", a reference to Conde, who had sparked fury by changing the constitution in order to run for a third term.

"Our path will be strewn with all sorts of pitfalls that we are called upon to overcome from now on, until the installation of the future National Assembly, at the end of credible and transparent elections that will be organised to put an end to the transition," Kourouma added.

Conde, who was Guinea's first democratically elected president and had been in power since 2010, was deposed on September 5 last year at the age of 83.

- 'Work starts today' -

Colonel Mamady Doumbouya, who led the coup, was sworn in as interim president a month later, promising to "refound the state".

He also vowed to fight corruption and reform the electoral system in order to hold "free, credible and transparent" elections.

The CNT, whose members were chosen by Doumbouya from lists submitted by political parties and associations, is tasked with drafting a new constitution and suggesting a date for a return to civilian rule.

In the meantime, the government and other institutions have been dissolved and ministers, governors and prefects replaced with administrators and soldiers.

The US ambassador to Guinea, Troy Fitrell, congratulated the country on the new CNT.

"Work starts today to return democracy to the Guinean people," he wrote in a tweet. "The challenge is to do it in 2022."

Guinea is one of three West African countries where the military seized power in the last 18 months, along with Mali and Burkina Faso.

The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has suspended both Guinea and neighbouring Mali from the bloc and imposed sanctions over the coups.

In a mark of defiance, the president of the transitional council of Mali and former junta member Colonel Malick Diaw attended Saturday's inaugural session of Guinea's assembly.

"With the political transition under way in Mali and Guinea our two countries are at a crossroads," Diaw said, insisting the end goal was "political normalisation."

ECOWAS demanded that Guinea hold elections within six months of the coup, which would fall in mid-March.


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AFRICA NEWS
Mali publishes bill to shore up junta leader's powers
Bamako (AFP) Feb 5, 2022
Mali's military-dominated authorities on Saturday published a bill designed to further shore up the powers of junta leader Colonel Assimi Goita. The text, adopted by a cabinet meeting late Friday, provides for the "abolishment of the post of vice-president (of the transition government) to avoid mission duplications and allow the minister charged with defence and the minister charged with security to recover and exercise the full extent of their traditional remits." The change further tightens C ... read more

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