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 | | | | Répression d'une manifestation à Conakry: des nouvelles? (29 septembre 2009) Veve75020 · 29 septembre 2009 à 22:16 3 messages · 3 participants · 1 914 affichages | | | | 29 septembre 2009 à 22:16 Répression d'une manifestation à Conakry: des nouvelles? (29 septembre 2009) Message 1 de 3 · 1 912 affichages · Partager bonsoir,
certaines sources parlent de plus de 150 morts dans les rues de conackry. quelqu'un a des infos? | | | À: Veve75020 · 29 septembre 2009 à 22:28 Re: Répression d'une manifestation à Conakry: des nouvelles? (29 septembre 2009) Message 2 de 3 · 1 906 affichages · Partager Bonsoir,
A part la presse, j'en attends aussi. Peut être des nouvelles de là bas demain si les communications passent? | | | À: Choucarde · 30 septembre 2009 à 9:47 Re: Répression d'une manifestation à Conakry: des nouvelles? (29 septembre 2009) Message 3 de 3 · 1 884 affichages · Partager Bonjour Anne,
ce matin, j'ai reçu un mail par un membre russe de MANSA ( Mande Studies Association/US) informé par un Guinéen qui pourrait t'intéresser...
Bonne journée à toi, hgb
Voici...
Bonsoir :
Dieu merci puisque je suis vivant.
Hier matin, nous étions plus de 50 000 personnes entassées à un stade de Conakry lorsque les militaires de la garde présidentielle ont ouvert le feu sur nous en tirant à bout portant sur des civils désarmés que nous sommes. 157 morts et 1225 bléssés est le triste bilan de cette journée macabre.
Comment certains éléments d'une armée peuvent elle introduire le bout de leur fusil sur le sexe de femmes et tirés ? Voici un seul element des choses que nous avons vues. Je n'irai pas dans les détails et tout le monde est d'accord avec moi que cela ne doit pas rester impuni
Ils ont encerclés le stade avant d'ouvrir le feu, beaucoup de manifestants ont été poignardés à la baillonnette, assez de femmes violées, humiliées. Par respect pour ceux qui vont lire cela, je m'abstiens de decrire les choses comme je les ai vu pour ne pas choquer les consciences humaines..
Comment je me suis ensorti ? dès que les coups de feu ont commencé, la rentrée principale étant bloquée par les militaires, j'ai éssayé d'escalader les gradins. Impossible, je suis redescendu sur la pelouse. Je suis remonté de ce guépier en... escaladant un mur de 3 m. je suis tombé sur l'autre côté du mur et je me suis bléssé à la main gauche
Comme je voyais des éléments de l'armée qui couraient vers ma direction, je me suis sauvé par un égout assez étroit par rapport à ma taille. Heureusement que cet égout m'a méné jusqu'à l'université de Conakry où j'ai pu me sauver. Mais beaucoup de participants n'ont pas eu ma chance et ont été tués.
ci joint, un rapport publié à New york
September 29, 2009 Soldiers reeking of alcohol menaced Guinea's capital Tuesday, a day after the military's presidential guard shot at pro-democracy demonstrators in the West African country, leaving at least 157 people dead, a human rights group said.The soldiers fired into the air as they roamed the deserted streets of the normally bustling capital. Guinea's military leader, who rose to power in a December coup, said Monday's violence was beyond his control.Dr. Chierno Maadjou with the Guinean Organization for Defense of Human Rights said 157 people had been killed and more than 1, 200 wounded on Monday.An Associated Press reporter said he saw halls full of wounded patients at the city's large Donka Hospital, some with bullet wounds, others who appeared to have been beaten.New York-based Human Rights Watch said eyewitnesses also told them that security forces had stripped female protesters Monday and raped them in the streets. Other eyewitnesses said soldiers had stabbed protesters with knives and bayonets.Tensions have risen in Guinea amid rumors that military leader Capt. Moussa "Dadis" Camara may run in presidential elections set for Jan. 31. Camara said that the shootings by members of his presidential guard were beyond his control."Those people who committed those atrocities were uncontrollable elements in the military, " he told Radio France International on Monday night. "Even I, as head of state in this very tense situation, cannot claim to be able to control those elements in the military."Corinne Dufka, senior West Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch, said the killing of dozens of unarmed protesters is "shocking even by the abusive standards of Guinea's coup government.""Guinea's leaders should order an immediate end to attacks on demonstrators and bring to justice those responsible for the bloodshed, " she said.The African Union, the European Union and the government of neighboring Senegal all quickly denounced Monday's violence. The AU had suspended Guinea's membership after Camara seized power in a December coup.The African Union Commission condemned the "indiscriminate firing on unarmed civilians, " and urged Guinean officials to respect the freedom of expression and assembly.EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana called for the immediate release of arrested political leaders.Opposition leader Sidya Toure, a former prime minister, was arrested during the protests and released Tuesday. When he returned home, he said he found it had been ransacked."I have come back to a broken home, " he said. "What upsets me most is that they destroyed my library. All my books and souvenirs are gone."Camara came to power in a coup hours after longtime dictator Lansana Conte died. Camara initially said he would not run in a presidential election set for Jan. 31 but recently said he has the right to run.The opposition-led protest in the capital's main football stadium Monday drew some 50, 000 people, with demonstrators chanting "We want true democracy."On Aug. 27, police fired tear gas to break up a demonstration in the capital, and last Thursday tens of thousands of residents in a town north of Conakry took to the streets with no serious incidents.Hardly anyone had heard of Camara, an army captain in his 40s, until Dec. 23, when his men broke down the glass doors of the state TV station. He announced that the constitution had been dissolved and that the country was now under the rule of a military junta.In the days after the coup, Camara was initially embraced by Guineans, thousands of whom lined the streets to applaud his arrival on the back of a flatbed military truck.But many began to question his tactics when he authorized raids on the homes of well-known members of Conte's inner circle. Camara claimed the raids were intended to recoup money and property stolen from the state, but some residents complained officials were using heavy-handed tactics.Since winning independence half a century ago from France, Guinea has been pillaged by its ruling elite. Its 10 million people are among the world's poorest, even though its soil has diamonds, gold, iron and half the world's reserves of the raw material used to make aluminum. | Tous les droits réservés © 2026 MyAtlas Group | 2 899 visiteurs en ligne depuis une heure! | |  |
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