Guinea’s long-delayed legislative election aimed at completing the mineral-rich West African nation’s transition to democracy will be held on September 24, its electoral commission said on Tuesday. Guinea’s government and opposition parties reached a U.N.-mediated agreement last week to hold elections at the end of September following a wave of opposition protests accusing President Alpha Conde of planning to rig the polls. “The Independent Electoral Commission has proposed holding the election on September 24,” said a statement from the body read over Guinea’s state television late on Tuesday.
Under Guinean law, President Conde, who was elected in 2010 in Guinea’s first democratic election since independence from France in 1958, must now accept or reject the proposed date.
The elections, initially planned for 2011, have been postponed several times as a result of disputes between the opposition and the government over preparations for the vote.
Full Article: Guinea election body sets legislative polls for September 24 – chicagotribune.com.