San Francisco Chronicle

Soldiers detain president in apparent coup attempt

- By Boubacar Diallo and Krista Larson Boubacar Diallo and Krista Larson are Associated Press writers.

CONAKRY, Guinea — Mutinous soldiers in the West African nation of Guinea detained President Alpha Conde on Sunday after hours of heavy gunfire rang out near the presidenti­al palace in the capital, then announced on state television that the government had been dissolved in an apparent coup d’etat.

The country’s borders were closed and its constituti­on was declared invalid in the announceme­nt read aloud on state television by army Col. Mamadi Doumbouya, who told Guineans: “The duty of a soldier is to save the country.”

It was not immediatel­y known, though, how much support Doum - bouya had within the military or whether other soldiers loyal to the president might attempt to wrest back control.

Conde’s whereabout­s had been unknown for hours after the intense fighting Sunday in central Conakry until a video emerged showing the 83-year-old leader tired and disheveled in military custody. It was not known when or where the video was taken, though a soldier’s voice can be heard asking Conde whether the rebel troops had harmed him in any way.

Doumbouya, the commander of the army’s special forces unit, later addressed the nation from state television headquarte­rs, draped in a Guinean flag with about a half dozen other soldiers flanked at his side. will no longer entrust politics to one man. We will entrust it to the people,” Doumbouya said, without mentioning Conde by name.

A former U.S. diplomat in Conakry confirmed to the Associated Press that the president had been taken into custody by the putschists. The diplomat, who was in contact with Guinean officials, spoke on condition of anonymity.

Conde, in power for more than a decade, had seen his popularity plummet since he sought a third term last year, saying that term limits did not apply to him.

In Sunday’s speech, Doumbouya called on other soldiers “to put themselves on the side of the people” and stay in their barracks. The army colonel said he was acting in the best interests of the nation, citing a lack of economic progress by leaders since the country gained independen­ce from France in 1958.

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