Guinea Supreme Court confirms vote to change constitution
Africa
By
AFP
| Sep 27, 2025
A voter casts his ballot at the Taouyah Primary School polling station in Conakry on September 21, 2025 in Guinea. [AFP]
Guinea's Supreme Court on Friday confirmed the result of a referendum to approve a new constitution in the junta-ruled country, saying it was backed by an overwhelming majority of voters.
The final tallies -- 89.38 percent in favour and 10.62 percent against -- confirmed the provisional vote results announced on Tuesday evening.
Opposition parties had called on voters to boycott last Sunday's referendum, accusing General Mamady Doumbouya of using it to stay in power.
Earlier on Friday, they had filed a request to the court to annul the result. The request was rejected.
READ MORE
Acid test for Mbadi as Kenyans brace for fresh IMF conditions
Inside the Sh9m Mercedes-Benz GLE 350d Omanga gifted son
Tullow seals Kenya assets sale deal
State bans Saccos from borrowing to pay dividends
Insurance leaders chart digital shift at Nairobi forum
Kenyan health firm bets on Africa's future with smart city push
Kenyans tap US stocks through tokenised crypto platforms
Ketraco yet to pay landowners Sh4 billion in wayleave compensation
New fintech partnership to cut costs, simplify payments for Kenyan SMEs
State tightens grip on saccos as sector's asset base hits Sh1 trillion
The court's confirmation paves the way for elections to be held in December.
The signs suggest that Doumbouya will run for the presidency, despite an earlier promise that he would not.
Guinea, an impoverished nation in west Africa, has long been blighted by coups and violence from authoritarian regimes.
When the military toppled president Alpha Conde in 2021, they initially said they would return the country to civilian rule by 2024, before reneging on that commitment.
United Nations rights chief Volker Turk called Thursday on the military regime to lift bans on opposition parties and media outlets.
He also criticised what he said was a broader assault on fundamental rights in Guinea since the coup, referring to a rise in arbitrary arrests and enforced disappearances.