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| - Guinea's leading opposition figure Cellou Dalein Diallo has appealed President Alpha Conde's victory in last month's presidential election at the country's constitutional courty, his lawyer said on Monday. Alpha Conde, 82, won a hotly-contested October 18 election, according to provisional official results, setting the stage for a controversial third term in office. But Diallo, 68, had already claimed victory, citing data his activists gathered at individual polling stations. That move triggered weeks of clashes between Diallo's supporters and security forces in the West African nation, in which at least 20 people were killed. Amadou Diallo, a lawyer representing the opposition leader, told AFP that the appeal, which was filed on Sunday, contains "irrefutable evidence" that irregularities marred the election. While he did not offer details about the evidence, the lawyer said it would allow the constitutional court to annul Conde's victory. Three other losing presidential candidates besides Cellou Dalein Diallo have also filed appeals to the constitutional court, according to a court official who declined to be named. Much of the turbulence in Guinea centres on a third term for the octogenarian president, whom opponents accuse of drifting into authoritarianism. A former opposition figure whom an authoritarian leader once sentenced to death, Conde became Guinea's first democratically elected leader in 2010, and won-relection in 2015. He pushed through a new constitution in March which he argued would modernise the country. But it also allowed him to bypass a two-term limit for presidents. Opposition to that move had provoked mass protests from October 2019, in which security forces killed dozens of people. Diallo and his supporters are deeply suspicious of the credibility of the October election, although officials from the African Union and the 15-nation ECOWAS bloc said it was mostly fair. The European Union, United States and the former colonial power France all released statements last week expressing concern about the vote-counting process, however. bm/siu/eml/wai
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