Junta led Guinea to hold presidential elections in December
Guinea's Prime Minister has announced December 2025 as the new date for national elections, aiming to reassure investors during a speech on Monday at the Africa CEO Forum in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire.
Guinea has announced December 2025 for national elections, aiming to reassure stakeholders and investors.
A constitutional referendum is scheduled prior to elections on September 21, 2025.
The announcement was made by Prime Minister Amadou Oury Bah as the government plans to transition back to civilian rule.
Guinea's Prime Minister has announced December 2025 as the new date for national elections, aiming to reassure investors during a speech on Monday at the Africa CEO Forum in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire.
Prime Minister Amadou Oury Bah announced while discussing the West African country's massive Simandou iron ore project.
"The constitutional referendum will be on September 21 and the legislative and presidential elections will be in December," he said.
"I can assure you that Simandou's first train will arrive before the elections."
General Mamadi Doumbouya seized power in September 2021, toppling President Alpha Condé after he controversially amended the constitution to extend presidential terms from five to six years, allowing himself a third term following the end of his second term in 2020.
Missed transition deadlines
While the junta proposed a two-year transition to civilian rule in 2022, it failed to take tangible steps toward organising elections. A key deadline of December 31, 2024, to restore democratic governance came and went without progress.
Now, the military government has announced a revised timeline. A constitutional referendum is scheduled for September 21, 2025, an exercise authorities insist must precede national elections and a full return to constitutional order.
Yet, concerns about the credibility of this transition persist. Guinea's political space remains tightly controlled, with the two former ruling parties suspended and the main opposition party, the Union of Democratic Forces of Guinea, placed under surveillance. These restrictions cast doubt on the fairness and inclusiveness of the electoral process ahead.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Russia's Wagner mercenaries leaving Mali, Africa Corps to remain
Russia's Wagner mercenary group says it will withdraw from Mali after more than three and a half years on the ground. The paramilitary force announced the move on Friday, claiming it had successfully completed its mission against armed groups in the West African nation. In a post on its Telegram channel, the group said that it had brought all of the country's regional centres back under the control of the Malian military government, pushing out rebel forces and killing their commanders. But Wagner's withdrawal from Mali does not mean the country will be without Russian fighters. Russian mercenaries will remain under the banner of the Africa Corps, a separate Kremlin-backed paramilitary group created after Wagner founder Yevgeny Prigozhin led a failed mutiny against the Russian military in June 2023. 'Russia does not lose ground, but on the contrary, continues to support Bamako now at a more fundamental level,' said a statement by Africa Corps, referring to Mali's capital city. In addition to Africa Corps, 'Russian security advisers are stepping in where the mercenaries are stepping out,' said Al Jazeera's Nicolas Haque, reporting from neighbouring Senegal. Ulf Laessing, head of the Sahel programme at Germany's Konrad Adenauer Foundation, told Reuters that while 'the Russian military engagement in Mali will continue … the focus might change more to training and providing equipment and less actual fighting jihadists.' The shift in the Russian presence in Mali follows a spate of attacks in recent weeks that rebel fighters say killed more than 100 Malian soldiers, as well as some mercenaries. Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), an armed group in the Sahel, claimed responsibility for the violence, including one attack on Sunday that killed at least 30 soldiers at central Mali's Boulkessi army base. Local officials told Reuters the military has since abandoned the base. Ukrainian-backed Tuareg rebels have also been behind some of the attacks on Russian mercenaries in the country, reported Haque. 'Away from the theatre of the Russia-Ukraine war, in the heart of Africa, the Ukrainians are supporting Tuareg rebels that are fighting Russian mercenaries,' said Haque. Meanwhile, Malian forces and their Russian allies have been accused of abuses against civilians, including a February attack on a convoy that killed more than 20 people believed to be Tuareg, among them children and elderly people.
Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
Wagner to withdraw from Mali after 'completing mission'
The Wagner Group has announced it is withdrawing from Mali following what it called "the completion of its main mission" in the West African country. The Russian mercenary group has been operating there since 2021, working with the military to challenge Islamist militants. In a message on its Telegram channel, Wagner said it had "fought terrorism side-by-side with the people of Mali", killing "thousands of militants and their commanders, who terrorised civilians for years". The withdrawal announcement comes the same day as reports that Malian soldiers had pulled out from a major base in the centre of the country, after it came under a second deadly attack in less than a week. Mali has been grappling with a militant Islamist insurgency for more than a decade. Following accusations that the government had been failing to deal with this insecurity, the military seized power a few years ago. French troops, which were originally deployed to help the civilian government, left the country in 2022. By then, the junta in charge of Mali had already begun working with the Russian mercenaries to combat the insurgents. There has been a resurgence in jihadist attacks on military bases in the Sahel state in recent weeks. Last Sunday, an al-Qaeda linked group said it had carried out a major attack on the town of Boulikessi and the army base there. More than 30 soldiers were killed, according to sources quoted by the news agency Reuters. Then on Monday, the same group - Jama'a Nusrat ul-Islam wa al-Muslimin (JNIM) - said it targeted the military in the historic city of Timbuktu, with residents reporting hearing gunfire and explosions. Insurgents also attacked an army post in the village of Mahou in the southeastern Sikasso region, killing five. Locals told the news agency AFP that soldiers withdrew from the Boulkessi base on after a new assault on Thursday led to multiple deaths. A military source said the departure was "strategic" and "at the request of the hierarchy", the news agency reported. The increased assaults in the Sahel region have raised concerns about the efficacy of Wagner in the region. Although the paramilitary group has announced its exit from Mali, Russian forces will still play an active role in the country's security landscape. Fighters from Africa Corps - a rival Russian mercenary force intended to absorb Wagner's activities on the continent - will remain in Mali. Russia has an increasing military, political and economic influence in West and Central Africa. Friday's announcement did not state whether Wagner would be leaving the Central African Republic, where its African headquarters are located. Wagner in Africa: How the Russian mercenary group has rebranded Was Ukraine's role in big Wagner defeat an own goal in Africa? Why Wagner is winning hearts in the Central African Republic Go to for more news from the African continent. Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica Africa Daily Focus on Africa
Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
Interpol issues red notice for Ghana's ex-finance minister over corruption claims
ACCRA, Ghana (AP) — Global police organization Interpol placed Ghana 's former finance minister Ken Ofori-Atta on its red notice list on Friday for allegedly using public office for personal gain. The notice follows a request from the West African country's prosecutors who have declared Ofori-Atta a 'fugitive' after he failed to appear before an investigative panel this month citing medical reasons. The former minister's lawyers said they submitted medical records to the court showing he is receiving treatment abroad. His exact location remains unclear. Ofori-Atta's lawyer, Frank Davies, told The Associated Press that the declaration of his client as a 'fugitive' is 'very condescending" and 'an unfettered infringement of Ofori-Atta's rights to personal liberty and freedom of movement.' Davies said the former minister had informed the authorities of his intention to travel outside the country for medical attention since February. An Interpol red notice — while not an arrest warrant — alerts law enforcement agencies to locate and detain Ofori-Atta pending extradition. Ofori-Atta, who served as finance minister from 2017 to 2024 for the New Patriotic Party, is accused of having been involved in several corruption cases, including the misuse of $58 million of public funds for a national cathedral project that never materialized. Last December, the NPP's candidate Mahamudu Bawumia lost the the presidential election to the National Democratic Congress nominee John Mahama. Since taking office in January, Mahama has launched an anti-corruption campaign aimed at recovering $20 billion in alleged stolen state funds. Critics, however, say the effort has spared allies of his administration. Ofori-Atta has not commented on the accusations, but has said in the past he was unlawfully treated by the prosecution. In March, he filed a lawsuit against the office of the special prosecutor, requesting the removal of 'damaging' content from the office's social media platforms.