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Plane carrying Guinea's ex-junta chief diverted to Ghana

By AFP
Nigeria Guinea's former military ruler Captain Moussa Dadis Camara holds a press conference on May 11, 2015, from Ouagadougou, to announce his intention to run for the upcoming 2015 Guinean presidential election.  By Ahmed Ouoba AFPFile
AUG 26, 2015 LISTEN
Guinea's former military ruler Captain Moussa Dadis Camara holds a press conference on May 11, 2015, from Ouagadougou, to announce his intention to run for the upcoming 2015 Guinean presidential election. By Ahmed Ouoba (AFP/File)

Conakry (AFP) - A plane carrying Guinea's exiled former junta chief Moussa Dadis Camara back home to Conakry where he hopes to run for president in October was diverted to Ghana Wednesday, according to his political party.

Camara is a former army captain who seized power in a 2008 coup after the death of longtime dictator Lansane Conte, a move initially welcomed but that quickly turned sour as he oversaw a bloody crackdown on his opponents.

The former junta leader has been living in exile in Burkina Faso since being shot in the head in an assassination attempt a year after taking power, and on Wednesday left Ouagadougou on a flight to Guinea with a planned layover in Abidjan.

However Maxime Manimou, a spokesman for his Patriotic Front for Democracy and Development (FPDD) said the plane was blocked from landing in Abidjan and forced to land in Ghana.

Manimou said all passengers "were asked to get off the plane at the Accra airport", before being allowed to reboard, with the exception of Dadis Camara, his lawyer and bodyguard.

The spokesman accused Guinean authorities of blocking Dadis Camara's return to prevent him from taking part in presidential elections on October 11.

However Guinea's government spokesman Albert Damantang Camara denied any involvement in blocking the plane from landing in Abidjan.

The move angered scores of Dadis Camara's supporters waiting for him in Conakry, who blocked access to the airport's parking and threw stones at police who fired tear gas to disperse them, according to an AFP reporter at the scene.

Camara's rule is best remembered for a massacre in September 2009 when security forces opened fire on a crowd protesting the junta, leaving 157 dead and horrific scenes of sexual violence.

Camara -- who also delivered televised diatribes on "The Dadis show" in which he humiliated opponents and foreign diplomats -- was last month charged in Conakry over the massacre.

As the west African nation prepares to hold its second democratic election in some six weeks, Camara has returned to the spotlight in an unlikely political alliance with opposition leader Cellou Dalein Diallo.

Diallo has said that if either of them made it into a second-round run-off against President Alpha Conde, the other would offer his backing.

A source close to Dadis Camara in Conakry said he wants to return to "turn himself over to the courts, prove his innocence and file his candidacy for the election" ahead of the September 1 expiry date.

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