Alpha Condé

President

Birthday March 4, 1938

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Boké, French Guinea

Age 86 years old

Nationality Guinea

#58326 Most Popular

1938

Alpha Condé (N'Ko: ߊߟߑߝߊ߫ ߞߐ߲ߘߍ߫; born 4 March 1938) is a Guinean politician who served as the fourth president of Guinea from 2010 to 2021.

Condé was born on 4 March 1938 in Boke in Lower Guinea.

His parents were from Upper Volta.

Condé left for France at the age of 15.

1965

Condé wrote a master's thesis in political science, Le P.D.G. et le peuple de Guinée, in 1965.

1967

He was active in the National Union of Higher Education (SNESUP), the Association of Guinean Students in France (AEGF), and the Black African Students Federation in France (FEANF), of which he was claimed to be the Executive Coordinator of African National Groups (GN) from 1967 to 1975, overseeing the activities of the Directorate of FEANF.

1984

Lansana Conté, who had been president since a 1984 coup d'état, won the election with 51.7 percent of the vote.

Condé's supporters alleged fraud in this election after the Supreme Court nullified results in the Kankan and Siguiri prefectures, where Condé had received more than 60 percent of the vote.

Condé's supporters retorted with intimidation, ballot stuffing and violence in the Kankan and Siguiri prefectures resulting in the Supreme Court nullifying the results in those prefectures.

1993

Condé spent decades in opposition to a succession of regimes in Guinea, unsuccessfully running against President Lansana Conté in the 1993 and 1998 presidential elections and leading the Rally of the Guinean People (RPG), an opposition party.

Condé won 18 percent of the vote in Guinea's first multiparty presidential election, held on 19 December 1993.

1998

In the 1998 presidential election, Condé ran again and received 17.6 percent of the vote, placing third behind Conté (56.1 percent) and Mamadou Boye Bâ (24.6 percent).

On 16 December, two days after the poll, Condé was arrested and charged with trying to leave the country illegally; he was also charged with attempting to recruit forces to destabilize the government.

Controversy during his detention focused on whether he could be represented by foreign as well as domestic lawyers, and whether defense lawyers were being given full access to him in jail.

1999

Condé's trial, initially scheduled to begin in September 1999, did not begin until April 2000.

Condé, along with 47 co-defendants, was charged with hiring mercenaries, planning to assassinate President Conté, and upsetting the state's security.

Defense lawyers began by calling for the judge to immediately release their clients, then quit, saying that under the circumstances they could not properly make a defense.

The trial was thus delayed several times, during which time Condé refused to speak in court, and his co-defendants denied all of the charges.

The trial finally continued in August, and in mid-September Condé was sentenced to jail for five years.

2001

However, Condé was released in May 2001 when he was pardoned by President Conté, with the condition that he was prohibited from engaging in political activities.

2005

Following his release, he left Guinea for France, returning in July 2005.

Upon his return, some reports indicated that he intended to organize the RPG for the municipal elections held in late 2005, but later stated his intention to boycott them.

2008

Following Conté's death and the 23 December 2008 military coup, Condé met with Moussa Dadis Camara, the President of the National Council for Democracy and Development (CNDD), on 27 December 2008.

After the meeting, Condé said that the members of the CNDD junta were "patriots".

Condé lobbied the CNDD junta to arrest and jail Condé's political rivals.

Later, however, Condé opposed the junta after failing to push the CNDD junta to intimidate and disqualify Condé's political rivals.

Moussa Dadis Camara publicly exposed Condé's request to commit anti-democratic and anti-constitutional acts on his behalf.

2010

Standing again in the 2010 presidential election, Condé was elected president in a second round of voting.

Upon his election, he said he would strengthen Guinea as a democracy and fight corruption.

When Condé took office in December 2010, he became the first freely elected president in the country's history.

Condé stood again in the June–November 2010 presidential election.

During the first round, he received 18 percent of the votes, while Cellou Dalein Diallo placed first with over 40 percent.

On 15 November 2010 Condé was declared the winner of the second round with 52.5 percent.

Imogen Rose-Smith from Institutional Investor said that his win was "surprising" given his "poor results" in previous elections and in the first round of this election.

2015

He was reelected in 2015 with about 58% of the vote, and again in 2020 with 59.5% after a constitutional referendum which allowed Condé to "reset" his term limit and seek two more terms.

The move was controversial and sparked massive protests before and after the referendum, which were brutally repressed.

Condé's critics have claimed there was fraud in the 2015 and 2020 elections.

2017

On 30 January 2017, Condé succeeded Chad's Idriss Déby as head of the African Union.

2018

He was succeeded by Rwandan President Paul Kagame on 28 January 2018.

On 5 September 2021, the Guinea Armed Forces arrested Condé and overthrew him.