6 killed in Guinean soldier pay protest

Six people were killed as mutinous soldiers stormed through Guinean cities firing into the air in a protest over pay today, the…

Six people were killed as mutinous soldiers stormed through Guinean cities firing into the air in a protest over pay today, the government said.

Passers-by fled in panic, shops and banks closed their shutters, and workers and motorists rushed to get home as heavily-armed protesting soldiers marched to a camp in the centre of the sprawling coastal capital Conakry.

There were similar scenes in other cities and the government said looting had taken place.

Calm later returned after Prime Minister Lansana Kouyate asked the uniformed protesters to return to their barracks, promising to meet them to hear their pay grievances and their demands for the dismissal of senior commanders.

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But the incident, following widespread protests in garrisons across the West African state a week ago, underlined the simmering instability of the world's largest bauxite exporter, which was rocked by violent strikes in January and February.

"We are here in the camp to demand our money. They promised it and they haven't delivered," one junior officer said at the central Samory barracks after he and other protesters marched there from the larger Alpha Yaya Diallo camp.

During their demonstrations the soldiers, some carrying grenade-launchers, fired rifle volleys into the air.

The government said the military protests killed one person in Conakry, three in the bauxite mining town of Kindia and two at Geckedou near the southeastern border with Liberia.

Most were believed to have been killed by stray bullets. In similar shooting protests last week, bullets fired out of the country's barracks have rained down from the sky onto the roofs of terrified residents' homes.

The army rioters, mostly rank and file and junior officers, have ransacked weapons and food stores and looted the private homes of several senior officers.

Guinea's armed forces received a hefty pay increase in March, shortly after they had helped to quell the strikes and riots against President Lansana Conte, a reclusive diabetic in his 70s whom union leaders say is unfit to rule.