AFP / JOHN WESSELS
Policemen fired slingshots as an anti-Conde demonstration in Conakry last month turned violent
Voters in the West African state Guinea were being called
to the polls on Sunday for a bitterly-disputed referendum that critics
say is a ploy by President Alpha Conde to stay in power.
Conde is proposing a change to the constitution to codify gender equality and introduce other social reforms.
But his opponents fear the real motive is to reset
presidential term limits, allowing Conde, 82, to run for a third spell
in office later this year -- a scenario that his government has not
discounted.
Since October, Guineans have protested en masse
against the possibility. At least 31 people and one gendarme have been
killed to date, according to an AFP tally.
There are also
concerns about the fairness of Sunday's vote, which additionally is
taking place amid mounting concern about the spread of coronavirus in
Africa.
Originally scheduled for March 1, Conde postponed it late
last month after international criticism of some 2.5 million dubious
names on the country's electoral roll.
Some 7.7 million people were on the register, out of a total population about 13 million people.
The
government says it has now scrubbed the problematic names, after an
expert team from the West Africa bloc ECOWAS urged doing so last week.
AFP / Gillian HANDYSIDE
Guinea
But Guinea's embattled opposition still doubts the vote's credibility.
Cellou
Diallo, a former premier and the head of the leading opposition party
the UFDG, said the process of cleaning up the electoral roll had been
opaque.
"It is an electoral masquerade," he said, adding that the roll did not reflect the electorate.
His
party, as well as the other large opposition parties, are boycotting
both the referendum and a parliamentary election that is taking place at
the same time.
In a deeply polarised political environment, opposition figures have also vowed to stop the votes from taking place.
- 'Authoritarian' Conde -
Sidya
Toure, the head of the opposition UFR party, said Conde wants to
"convince the international community he is open to criticism" while
pursuing a third term anyway.
A former opposition figure who was
jailed under previous hardline regimes, Conde entered the record books
when in 2010 he became Guinea's first democratically-elected president.
He
was returned to office by voters in 2015 for his second and final
five-year term under the current constitution, but critics say he has
become increasingly authoritarian, citing arrests of protest leaders.
AFP / Michael TEWELDE
Alpha Conde, centre, became Guinea's first
democratically-elected president in 2010 - today, critics say he has
taken the well-worn path of authoritarianism
The draft constitution would also limit presidential
terms to two but extend the length of the term to six years, potentially
enabling Conde to govern for another 12 years.
Guinea's
government argues the new constitution would usher in badly-needed
changes in the conservative country, especially for women.
These would include banning female genital mutilation and under-age marriage, and giving spouses equal rights in a divorce.
Conde has not denied that he might use the new constitution to seek another term when his second runs out this year.
He
told French media last month that there was "nothing more democratic"
than holding a referendum and it was up to his party to determine
whether he would run again.
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