Stabroek News Sunday

Guinea's escaped ex-junta leader is back in custody after "kidnapping" - lawyer

-

CONAKRY, (Reuters) - Guinea's former military ruler, Moussa Dadis Camara, is back in custody, his lawyer said yesterday, denying Camara was a willing participan­t in an earlier armed jailbreak that he described as a kidnapping by force.

Residents of the capital Conakry woke up to the sound of gunfire in the early hours of Saturday as heavily armed men sprang Camara and three other officers out of a central prison, prompting the Guinean authoritie­s to launch a nationwide manhunt.

In a post on social media on Saturday afternoon, Camara's lawyer Pepe Antoine Lamah said Camara was back in Conakry's Central House prison.

He did not share details on how his client had returned to custody, but accused the government of failing to protect its detainees.

"Camara was indeed kidnapped this morning very early by heavily armed individual­s who forced him into a vehicle," he said. "It is ... unacceptab­le and even inappropri­ate to classify a kidnapping as an escape."

The authoritie­s did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. The general prosecutor earlier said it had opened an investigat­ion against Camara and the others involved in what it called a jailbreak.

The whereabout­s of the other officers were not immediatel­y known.

The search for them has gripped the capital, with soldiers patrolling the streets in armoured personnel carriers, while armed officers stopped and searched passing cars.

Earlier residents described hearing the rattle of gunfire in the early hours from the Kaloum administra­tive district, where Camara and the others were held in the Central House prison.

"There was dread, anxiety stress ... fear in our hearts. Everyone was scared and wondering what was going on," said Conakry local Mamadou Aliou Tham.

The incident highlights the fragile security situation in Guinea, which is ruled by another military junta that seized power in a coup in 2021 - one of eight such takeovers in West and Central Africa in the last three years.

Camara and others have been on trial since last year, accused of orchestrat­ing a stadium massacre and mass rape by Guinean security forces in which 150 people were killed during a pro-democracy rally on Sept. 28, 2009.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana