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Guinea Holds Major Referendum

A long-awaited referendum was held in Guinea on Sunday, September 21, 2025. The referendum seeks to usher in a new constitution that could allow military junta ruler, Mamady Doumbouya to run for president if he chose to.

This is despite Doumbouya promising in 2021 when he seized power in a coup that he will not run for president.

The junta has already missed a December 31, 2024 deadline it had set for a return to civilian rule in Guinea.

Currently, the country’s presidential election is expected to take place in December.

But critics in and out of Guinea are worried the constitutional referendum is an attempt by the military government to legitimise its rule.

While the referendum is seen as a step towards elections and the return to civilian rule in Guinea, Doumbouya’s opponents have criticised it as a power grab by him.

However, he has not disclosed whether he intends to run for office. A transition charter adopted by his government after it took power said junta members would be barred from standing in the next election.

The referendum seems likely to pass because the two main opposition leaders, Cellou Dalein Diallo and deposed former President Alpha Conde, have called for a boycott of the vote.

Their parties are currently suspended, and Human Rights Watch has accused the government of disappearing political opponents and arbitrarily suspending media outlets.
The government has denied any role in disappearances but has vowed to investigate such allegations.
Voting centres were scheduled to open at 7 a.m. (0700 GMT) on Sunday and close at 6 p.m. (1800 GMT). It is unclear when results are expected.
The new constitution would lengthen the presidential term from five years to seven, renewable once, and create a Senate, with one-third of senators directly appointed by the president.
In the final days of campaigning, the capital Conakry was dotted with small white posters featuring the word “Yes” next to a green checkmark.
On Thursday, S&P Global Ratings assigned Guinea its first-ever sovereign rating, B+ with a stable outlook. This makes Guinea the third best-rated economy in West Africa, according to the ratings agency.
It noted, however, that despite some progress towards establishing a civilian administration, “social needs are high and tensions with the opposition are elevated with accusation of arbitrary arrests and rising pressure on the media”.

Source:Africa Publicity

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