CONAKRY, Guinea, Dec. 22, 2008

Iron-Handed Ruler Of Guinea Dies

Transition Of Power Expected To Be Rough In An African Nation Crippled By Corruption And Rocked By Coups

    • In this Sept. 24, 1999 file photo, President of Guinea Lansana Conte addresses the 54th Session of the General Assembly at the United Nations. Conte, who has ruled the African nation with an iron hand since seizing power in a coup nearly a quarter century ago, died following a lengthy illness, the National Assembly president said on Dec. 23, 2008.

      In this Sept. 24, 1999 file photo, President of Guinea Lansana Conte addresses the 54th Session of the General Assembly at the United Nations. Conte, who has ruled the African nation with an iron hand since seizing power in a coup nearly a quarter century ago, died following a lengthy illness, the National Assembly president said on Dec. 23, 2008.  (AP PHOTO)

    • A soldier looks at children leaning on a burned car near where anti-government protesters destroyed a military police station in Conakry, Guinea, in this Feb. 20, 2007 file photo. Guinea's president, himself a military general who seized power, died Dec. 22, 2008 after a prolonged illness.

      A soldier looks at children leaning on a burned car near where anti-government protesters destroyed a military police station in Conakry, Guinea, in this Feb. 20, 2007 file photo. Guinea's president, himself a military general who seized power, died Dec. 22, 2008 after a prolonged illness.  (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

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(AP)  Guinea President Lansana Conte, who has ruled the African nation with an iron hand since seizing power in a coup nearly a quarter century ago, has died following a lengthy illness, the National Assembly president said Tuesday.

Aboubacar Sompare, flanked by the country's prime minister and the head of the army, said on state-run television 2 a.m. that Conte died Monday evening. He was believed to be in his 70s but the government has never disclosed his birth date.

"I have the heavy duty of informing the people of Guinea of the death of Gen. Lansana Conte following a long illness," said Sompare. He did not provide a specific cause of death or elaborate on the type of illness.

Sompare said that for many years Conte "hid his physical suffering in order to give happiness to Guinea."

According to the Constitution, the head of the national assembly becomes president in the case of the death of the head of state. But transfers of power have rarely been smooth in Guinea, which has been crippled by corruption and rocked by multiple coups.

Prime Minister Ahmed Tidiane Souare called on the army to secure the nation's borders, while Sompare directed the country's courts to apply the law.

The two announcements, coupled by the presence of the head of the army, appeared to be an effort to signal that the government intended a peaceful transition.

The most serious recent challenge to Conte's rule came two years ago as demonstrators called for him to step down and Guinea descended into chaos.

Conte responded by declaring martial law and sent tanks into the capital streets. Security forces killed dozens of demonstrators.

Conte's health and his undisclosed illness has been an issue of national debate for years. Rumors of his death surfaced periodically, including in 2003 when he was forced to go on TV to deny them.

Such rumors flared earlier this month when Conte failed to make his usual televised appearance on Tabaski, an important Muslim holiday.

Last week, the editor of a local paper was arrested after publishing a picture of the frail leader struggling to stand up. A spokesman for the president went on TV to assure the nation that Conte was not ill.

The newspaper was ordered to print a photograph of Conte, showing him in good health.

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by whitemale08 December 23, 2008 11:03 PM EST
Another tinpot African dictator croaks. He was a swine - a true Guinea Pig.


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Posted by rational_1 at 01:40 PM : Dec 23, 2008--

I hope you understand who kept him in power all of this time...it is our pasty friends in England, namely British oligarchs who own Anglo-Mining.

They extract their sovereign bauxite for aluminum in exchange for worthless paper Federal Reserve Notes.

He''s just a British puppet that quell the people who know better that they shouldn''t have their natural resources extracted for worthless paper-butt-money.
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by downsteamjim December 23, 2008 10:31 PM EST
BRdeckard: No comments about CIA and drugs. Are you well? Merry Christman.
Reply to this comment
by rational_1 December 23, 2008 4:40 PM EST
Another tinpot African dictator croaks. He was a swine - a true Guinea Pig.
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by mytoosense December 23, 2008 12:35 PM EST
He was a Big Carp in a little pond.
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by apndrgn December 23, 2008 12:11 PM EST
It was the saddest moment of my life when my two guinea pigs, Cappy and Nikita died. At last they can rest easy in their graves.
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