Report of the International Commission of Inquiry mandated to establish the facts and circumstances of the events of 28 September 2009 in Guinea
The Commission is in a position to confirm the identity of 156 persons who
were killed or who disappeared: 67 persons killed whose bodies were returned to
their families, 40 persons who were seen dead in the stadium or in morgues but
whose bodies have disappeared, and 49 persons who were seen in the stadium but
whose fate is unknown. It confirms that at least 109 women were subjected to rape
and other sexual violence, including sexual mutilation and sexual slavery. Several
women died of their wounds following particularly cruel sexual attacks. The
Commission also confirms hundreds of other cases of torture or of cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment. Dozens of persons were arrested and arbitrarily detained in the
military camps of Alpha Yaya Diallo and Kundara and in the barracks of the riot
police (CMIS), where they were tortured. The security forces also systematically
stole demonstrators’ property and engaged in looting.
The Commission considers that, during the abuses on 28 September and the
immediate aftermath, the Guinean authorities deliberately embarked on destruction
of the traces of the violations committed, with the aim of concealing the facts:
cleaning of the stadium, removal of the bodies of the victims of executions, burial in
mass graves, denial of medical care to victims, deliberate alteration of medical
records and military take-over of hospitals and morgues. This operation created a
climate of fear and insecurity among the population. The Commission therefore
believes that the number of victims of all these violations is quite probably higher.
Guinea 28 September.pdf
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