Guinea protest death toll soars | ||||||
At least 157 opposition supporters are now believed to have died after Guinea's troops opened fire on a mass protest in the capital, Conakry, a human rights group has said. Sow told the Reuters news agency that the figure did not include the bodies of an unknown number of demonstrators killed which were never delivered to hospital in the city. The shootings took place on Monday after about 50,000 protesters gathered outside a stadium in defiance of an official ban on the demonstration.
"Even I, as head of state in this very tense situation, cannot claim to be able to control those elements in the military.'' But there was widespread international condemnation of the bloody crackdown. The African Union Commission, condemned the "indiscriminate firing on unarmed civilians", and urged Guinean officials to respect freedom of expression and assembly. "In this respect the commission is preparing a report on the developments in Guinea and possible measures to be taken, including sanctions," it said in a statement.
The AU suspended Guinea's membership after Camara seized power in a bloodless coup last December.
Paris called on the military government to "show responsibility and to listen to the Guinean people's legitimate aspiration to democratically choose their leaders". "Guinea's leaders should order an immediate end to attacks on demonstrators and bring to justice those responsible for the bloodshed," she said. | ||||||
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RESOURCE CENTRE OF DEMOCRACY, GOOD GOVERNANCE,TRANSPARENCY,ACCOUNTABILITY,AND HUMAN RIGHTS FOR EMERGING DEMOCRACIES IN THE HORN OF AFRICA AND THE MIDDLE EAST. THE BLOG IS TRI-LINGUAL: ENGLISH, SOMALI AND ARABIC. There is no democracy without effective opposition. And there is no effective opposition without free and independent media. CONTACT: samotalis@gmail.com
30 September, 2009
Guinea protest death toll soars
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