Fri Oct 26 05:13:51 200717

Fetching...
 
YOU ARE HERE: Homepage > Newsdesk > Article
GUINEA: 'Open house' at army base aims to ease military, civilian relations
29 Aug 2007 19:15:35 GMT
Source: IRIN
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.
DAKAR, 29 August 2007 (IRIN) - In Guinea a civil-military dialogue group is organising an 'open house' at the country's main military base, inviting citizens to meet with military officials to help "ease relations" between the two sectors which in recent months have met in the streets in deadly clashes.

"Our country sorely needs this kind of exchange," said Mohamed Kouyate, programme coordinator with Guinea's Centre for International Trade and Development (CECIDE), which is helping organise the 6 September open house at the Alpha Yaya Diallo military base in the capital, Conakry. "The main aim is to ease relations between [defence and security forces and civilians], because a country's development cannot happen without a solid understanding among the country's various actors."

Guinea – where citizens' patience is running thin over promised political and socioeconomic reforms – is still reeling from demonstrations in June 2006 and early this year when security and defence forces killed nearly 150 unarmed protesters and injured hundreds more.

"That was a bad thing for our country. But we have to come back to an understanding," said Colonel Bissi Michel, who has taken part in ongoing meetings aimed at improving relations between the military and civilians. "Without understanding between us, the military cannot carry out its work."

He added, "A soldier is first a civilian after all."

At the open house members of the public will be able to pose questions to security forces, while military officials are scheduled to explain their mission and their constraints to the people, CECIDE's Kouyate told IRIN. "Civilians and the military don't understand each other."

Mixed views

Citizens contacted by IRIN had mixed views of an effort to smooth relations between the two, one professor saying any such move would be but a "game" because the Guinean military has always and will always be "repressive."

But Hadja Mariama Kesso Diallo, a homemaker in the Koloma neighbourhood of Conakry, said after the "savage killings" of earlier this year, dialogue between security forces and civilans is the right thing to do. "We civilians could express what we have in our hearts in an effort to erase the hate. I think that would ease tensions and the reconciliation we seek could materialise."

Mohamed Sanoussy Diaoune, a university student in Conakry, agreed that any effort to improve relations is welcome. "In January and February, the Guinean army failed in its role which is in part...to protect citizens. Instead it massacred innocent people. Therefore civilian-military consultation [would be] very beneficial."

The idea for the open house stems from a civilian-military committee, which includes representatives of the military, police, political parties, unions, non-governmental organisations, the media, religious groups and women's groups. The committee, backed in part by the US Agency for International Development, holds regular meetings and works to educate both sides about their rights and responsibilities, according to Bakary Fofana of CECIDE.

Repeated clashes

The committee was set up in June 2006 following clashes between riot police and students in which at least 11 youths were shot dead. The group's aim was in part to create a dialogue between security forces and civilians to avoid such clashes.

But less than a year later, in January and February 2007, army and presidential guard troops fired on civilians again during unprecedented nationwide strikes in which demonstrators called for President Lansana Conte to step down. Among the 137 people killed were several children. Nearly 2,000 people were reportedly wounded. And a few months later more citizens were killed and injured when soldiers rioted over back pay and other grievances.

The incidents are supposed to be under investigation by a government commission, but Guineans are still waiting for results. The parliament in May unanimously passed a law creating an investigative commission but President Conte has yet to promulgate the law and the probe has yet to get off the ground, observers say.

While the government apparently has not prosecuted security forces over human rights violations, nor has it answered the military's longstanding demands. The open house is scheduled for the same week some soldiers have said they would "make themselves heard" as they did earlier this year if the government did not pay up.

np/nr/ha

© IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.irinnews.org
IRIN news

Delicio.us  |   Digg  |   NewsVine  |   Reddit                                                                                  Permalink


Chart for Refugees residing here
GUINEA: Youths chase staff from state electricity offices, protesting power cuts
GUINEA: Slight boost in water, electricity services but much to be done
SENEGAL: Calls for more prevention as cholera cases rise
GUINEA-BISSAU: Security Council warns drug trafficking undermines stability
Togo ruling party wins parliamentary elections
New report shows mixed results in tackling world hunger
Brown government disappoints on first test of AIDS commitment
Publications Update: a new newsletter from the International HIV/AIDS Alliance
New International Health Partnership must build on AIDS accountability
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2007-09-12T154759Z_01_DAK17_RTRIDSP_2_SENEGAL-MUTILATION-CAMPAIGN_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/DAK17.htm

Djime Diallo, chief of the village of the western Senegalese village of Diabougo, poses for a portrait outside his home September 10, 2007. Diabougou was only the second village in Senegal to publicly declare it was abandoning female genital cutting. Since then, nearly half of Senegalese villages have made similar declarations, along with 298 in Guinea and 23 in Burkina Faso. Tostan, a small Senegalese aid group credited with launching a grass roots campaign to abolish female circumcision in West Africa, will be awarded the $1.5 million Hilton Prize in New York on Wednesday. Picture taken September 10, 2007. To match feature SENEGAL-MUTILATION/CAMPAIGN



URL: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/bf5351fd1ddf5c025ee71f9dbbcc7d83.htm

For our full disclaimer and copyright information please visit http://www.alertnet.org