The Prince George Citizen

Officials to cancel portion of Guinea’s debt

- Boubacar DIALLO

CONAKRY, Guinea — More than $2.1 billion of Guinea’s foreign debt is being cancelled in a major boost for the deeply impoverish­ed West African nation whose mineral riches were looted over decades of corrupt dictatorsh­ip, officials said Wednesday.

Two-thirds of Guinea’s total foreign debt is being eliminated because it has qualified for the IMF and World Bank program for heavily indebted poor countries, according to a government statement. The decision to support $2.1 billion in debt relief for Guinea was later announced by the IMF and the World Bank following a meeting of their administra­tive council Wednesday.

“This will allow Guinea to free up substantia­l resources,” said Ansoumane Camara, an economist and consultant in Conakry who said the money could be redirected toward improving health and educationa­l programs.

Guinea’s finances were

left in ruins after nearly a quarter-century of rule by Lansana Conte, who pillaged state coffers to make his family fabulously wealthy before his death in 2008, according to economists. In 2010, the country held its first democratic election but the political reforms have not translated into immediate improvemen­ts for the lives of most Guineans, who remain deeply impoverish­ed.

About 75 per cent of the country’s 10 million people live below the poverty line, according to the United Nations.

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