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Newspaper editor and lawyer detained

[Guinea] President Lansana Conte. UN DPI
President Lansana Conte.
The news editor of an independent weekly newspaper, and the lawyer of an opposition politician who disappeared following last month's assassination attempt on President Lansana Conte, have been arrested, their colleagues said on Thursday. Journalists at La Lance said Benn Pepito, the news editor of the publication, was arrested at his home on Wednesday night. Paul Yomba Korouma, a lawyer who had been acting for missing opposition politician Antoine Soromou, was picked up a few hours later in the early hours of Thursday morning, one of his colleagues told IRIN. It was initially thought that Pepito had been arrested in connection with an article in La Lance which drew comparisons between the political crisis in Togo triggered by the death of President Gnassingbe Eyadema, and what might happen in Guinea when Conte, who is 71 and in poor health, finally quits the scene. In both countries, the constitution stipulates that if the president dies in office or becomes incapacitated, the president of the national assembly should take over as interim head of state and organise fresh elections. However, when Eyadema died in Togo earlier this month, the armed forces suspended the constitution and installed Faure Gnassingbe, the president's son, as the country's new leader. Pepito's article suggested that a similar coup was possible in Guinea, where Conte, a former army colonel, has held power for 21 years and has groomed no obvious favourite to succeed him. However, news of Korouma's arrest encouraged speculation that Pepito's arrest might have more to do with the disappearance of Soromou, the leader of the small National Alliance for Development (AND) opposition party. Soromou, the former mayor of the southeastern town of Lola, returned home from exile in Cote d'Ivoire last year. He and veteran opposition leader Alpha Conde were jailed from 1998 to 2000 on charges of plotting to overthrow Conte. On his release, Soromou moved to Cote d'Ivoire, where he set up a timber business. He returned to Guinea in late 2004 and was arrested on 6 January on the grounds that he had entered the country without a valid passport. He was held for a week before being released on 13 January on police bail. However, Soromou disappeared completely following an incident on 19 January when armed men fired on the president's motorcade in the capital Conakry, seriously injuring a bodyguard. Korouma claimed publicly that his client had been kidnapped, ostensibly by government agents. Pepito had followed the Soromou saga closely and had written several articles about the harassment of the politician and his eventual disappearance.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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