Apr 12, 2006
For too long, public figures within and outside Africa have been timid about discussing Guinea’s deep-rooted problems, says the International Crisis Group. "Its strong anti-imperialist stance in the 1960s and beyond earned it respect among pan-Africanists, but the hands-off attitude that grew out of that respect has long since degraded into indifference and cynicism. The probability is now high that President Conté’s term will end in a military takeover, which some seem prepared to accept before the fact, as if it were a means of preserving Guinea’s sovereignty."
































