Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07CONAKRY396
2007-04-11 09:53:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Conakry
Cable title:  

Guinean National Assembly to Address Electoral Bills, Prep

Tags:  PGOV KDEM EAID PHUM GV 
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VZCZCXRO1064
RR RUEHMA RUEHPA
DE RUEHRY #0396/01 1010953
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 110953Z APR 07
FM AMEMBASSY CONAKRY
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0933
INFO RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RUEHZK/ECOWAS COLLECTIVE
RHMFISS/HQ USEUCOM VAIHINGEN GE//POLAD J2/J5//
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 CONAKRY 000396 

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FOR AF/W, AF/EX, DS/IP/AF, CA/OCS
TREASURY FOR OFFICE OF AFRICAN NATIONS
PLEASE PASS ALSO AID/AFR

E.O. 12598: N/A
TAGS: PGOV KDEM EAID PHUM GV
SUBJECT: Guinean National Assembly to Address Electoral Bills, Prep
for Legislative Elections

REF: Conakry 155

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 CONAKRY 000396

SIPDIS

SIPDIS, SENSITIVE

FOR AF/W, AF/EX, DS/IP/AF, CA/OCS
TREASURY FOR OFFICE OF AFRICAN NATIONS
PLEASE PASS ALSO AID/AFR

E.O. 12598: N/A
TAGS: PGOV KDEM EAID PHUM GV
SUBJECT: Guinean National Assembly to Address Electoral Bills, Prep
for Legislative Elections

REF: Conakry 155


1. (SBU) Summary. As the Guinean National Assembly begins its
annual 45-day session, the details of the 2007 legislative elections
are both a matter of focus and very much in flux. Four bills on the
electoral process, negotiated during the political dialogues of the
ad hoc committee last August-September, are before the legislature.
Some members, of both the majority and opposition, believe the new
Minister of Internal Affairs and Security should be permitted to
review the draft legislation; members of the opposition would also
like to reopen two of the bills given the new political climate.
That said, these bills are likely to move forward through the
legislative process over the next few weeks.


2. (SBU) Opposition members plan to propose that large numbers of
local officials, now centrally appointed, should become elected
positions in order to provide better assurance that electoral
reforms are carried out. They seek to implement this change, which
would require constitutional amendment, before any legislative
elections. Even if this proposal fails, as it is likely to in the
near term, ruling and opposition legislators agree, and the donor
community concurs, that Guinea will not be prepared to hold
legislative elections by their scheduled June 2007 date, if such
elections are to be free and fair. End Summary.

--------------
PUP says June 2007 is too soon for elections
--------------


3. (SBU) State and USAID officers, along with other donors'
technical staff, met April 2 with Elhadj Banire Diallo, chair of the
majority party PUP's parliamentary committee to discuss the status
of 2007 legislative election preparations. Noting that he is a
professor of statistics and probability, Diallo said his formal
training and life experience tell him Guinea will not hold
legislative elections in June 2007.


4. (SBU) there are four electoral bills before the current session.
If passed, these would modify the electoral code; define the status
of opposition parties; finance political parties, and create an

independent national electoral commission (CENI) to co-administer
the elections with the government.


5. (SBU) Diallo said some National Assembly members, including
members of his own party, want the new Minister of Internal Affairs
and Security, Beau Keita, to review the draft legislation and
present it to the new cabinet, as was done by his predecessor.
Diallo, while not wholly opposed, feared another revision would
further delay the legislative elections, which most Guineans and
international observers already agree cannot take place in June, as
scheduled. The draft legislation was to be presented to the plenary
session of legislature in December 2006. Civil unrest and strikes
in January and February of this year further prevented any special
session.

--------------
Opposition Trying for More
--------------


6. (SBU) The donor group also met with Ousmane Bah, parliamentary
group chair of opposition party Union pour le Progres et le
Renouveau (UPR). UPR is the only opposition political party
currently represented in the National Assembly, so Bah served as
informal spokesman for all the opposition parties in this forum.
Bah claimed the opposition has not yet had a chance to debate the
draft legislation in plenary, but conceded that most opposition
party members would support it if it were put up for a vote.
(Comment: So far, the bills on the agenda have not come up for
parliamentary action, so it is not certain if, as Bah seems to fear,
PUP will curtail debate. In any event, his party, along with other
opposition members, was involved in negotiating the texts of these
bills in mid-2006. Bah told us in a lunch at the Ambassador's in
late March, however, that he wanted to seize the opportunity of a
new government to reopen the texts for further negotiation, seeing
the opposition in a stronger position now).


7. (SBU) Bah outlined concerns regarding financing the CENI. The
draft legislation calls only for the creation of the body, and not
financing. Bah said he sought to ensure the CENI financing would be
on the agenda for the first budgetary session. (Note: As of this
writing, the item is not/not on the agenda for the first budgetary
session, but that session is delayed in any event since the budget
has not yet been submitted.)

--------------
Local Representation is Key to Reform

CONAKRY 00000396 002 OF 002


--------------


8. (SBU) Bah argued electoral reforms can not be fully carried out
unless there is direct representation at the local level. Therefore,
he seeks to have positions that are now centrally appointed by the
executive (chef de quartier and chef du district) become elected
positions. Bah said ensuring that these positions are elected will
ensure accountability, and prepare the base for broader electoral
reforms. The opposition wants this concession in place before
legislative elections, even if the administration of the concession
necessitates delaying the elections until 2008, or beyond.


9. (SBU) The donor group cautioned Bah that reforming the electoral
process should be a work in progress; otherwise, significant delay
and obstacles could arise. The world and the Guinean people
themselves were watching and would not appreciate lost momentum.
(Note: at the biwekkly G-8 ambassadorial meeting April 10,
participants concurred that donors should push back on this
opposition initiative. The bills negotiated last fall should go
forward, we agreed, and legislative elections should not await
revamping Guinea's entire administrative structure. That said, the
G-8 reps agreed that preparations for4 the legislative elections
would require a delay of several months from June.)

--------------
COMMENT
--------------


9. (SBU) The donor community has speculated that Guinea would not
be prepared for legislative elections in June 2007. That members of
the National Assembly are openly saying so is not surprising. The
opposition is clearly feeling its oats. The Prime Minister and his
team will need to meet their commitment for ongoing political
dialogue to design a path forward that adequately addresses all
parties' concerns.

WINN