Guinea lawyers on strike over military crackdown
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Guinea military leaders have been accused of suppressing dissent
 Lawyers in Guinea are on strike to protest against a crackdown on dissent by the miliÂtary regime.
On Tuesday, the countryâs bar association denounced what it described as âarbitrary arrestsâ and the secret detention of citizens.
Lawyers would boycott court sesÂsions until July 31, it said.
Court activities are said to be âparalysedâ by the strike, which could disrupt a landmark trial over a 2009 massacre that is regarded as one of the darkest moments in the West African nationâs history.
A court is due to hand down its verdict on the countryâs former military ruler, Moussa Dadis Camara, over alleged crimes against humanÂity in relation to the 2009 killing of more than 150 people in a stadium, on July 31.
Authorities have insisted the trial will proceed, but it is unclear if the verdict will be read on that date because of the strike.
The strike follows the arrest on July 9 of Oumar Sylla and Mamadou Bah, the leaders of a citizensâ moveÂment that has been critical of the junta-led government and called for a return to civilian rule.
Rights group, Amnesty InternaÂtional, has called on the government to âimmediatelyâ release them.
It has called on the authorities to disclose where they are being detained and guarantee their safety, and allow them access to lawyers and family visits.
Franceâs far-left leader, Jean-Luc MĂ©lenchon, whose coalition won the most seats in the countryâs recent parliamentary election, has also weighed in on the arrests in Guinea, a former French colony.
âFrance is heavily engaged with the power in place. It must intervene so that they are immediately released and put out of danger,â he said on X (formerly Twitter).
For months now, the Guinean auÂthorities have been cracking down on peaceful dissent, including attempts to mobilise people towards a return to democratic rule.
The junta has been criticised for suspending media outlets, restricting internet access and brutally reÂpressing demonstrations.
At least 157 people were killed in 2009, when troops attacked people who had gathered in a stadium to protest against a previous military junta. Scores of women were raped.
Mr Camara, the countryâs leader at the time, is accused of many counts of murder, sexual violence, torture, abduction and kidnapping, along with other officials implicated in the massacre.
âBBC
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