14, March 2018
Guinea: Teachers reach deal with government, call off strike 0
Guinea’s powerful teachers’ union has reached a deal with the government on a pay raise, canceling a month-long strike.
Aboubacar Soumah, the secretary general of the SLECG union, announced the end of the strike after signing an agreement with Inspector General for Work Alya Camara on Wednesday.
The government provided the teachers a guarantee to raise pay by 40 percent, which was agreed in 2017 and was only partially implemented in February.
The union and the government have also agreed to hold talks on May 2-25 for a base salary of eight million Guinean francs ($880). The teachers were also promised that strikers would not be punished.
“Each of us put the interests of Guinea first, through the children who should be back at school,” said government mediator Mohamed Said Fofana.
The strikes have paralyzed the country’s education system and fueled tensions between teachers, parents and the state. President Alpha Conde has also been criticized for allowing the strike action to continue.
Rights groups regularly condemn heavy death tolls during demonstrations and industrial action in the West African country.
Source: Presstv
15, March 2018
Two killed in day 3 of Guinea protests 0
A senior police source in Guinea has said two people were on Wednesday shot dead during riots in the Guinean capital as authorities clashed with anti-government protesters.
The circumstances of the two civilian deaths were not yet clear, but they occurred in the Wanindara suburb of Conakry , where witnesses say police and gendarmes clashed with protesters and dispersed crowds with tear gas.
A government spokesman was not immediately available to comment on the demonstrations in Africa’s top producer of bauxite where political violence frequently occurs.
Opposition parties in this West African nation are demanding the publication of results from local elections held on Feb. 4 that allies of President Alpha Conde say they have won.
Meanwhile, company and government officials say, rioting had subsided in the western mining towns of Boke and Kamsar, allowing bauxite shipments to resume.
Reuters