Lansana Conte
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Lansana Conte (born 1934) is the President of Guinea (since 1984).
Conte seized power in a military coup on April 3, 1984, a week after the death of President Ahmed Sekou Toure. He survived coup attempts against him in 1985 and 1996. In the early 1990s, unrest forced him to accept political reforms that led to multiparty elections (which he won with 51.7% of the vote) in 1993, but in the years since he has once again consolidated his authoritarian rule. In 2001 he eliminated the constitutional restrictions on his remaining in office for life and lengthened presidential terms to seven years through a referendum widely regarded as rigged. He went on to win a presidential election in December of 2003 with 95.6% of the vote after all but one of the opposing candidates boycotted the race, expressing their belief that Conte would never allow a fair election. Conte has been in declining health in recent years and his ability to survive another full term in office has been widely doubted.
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