Dialogue / Bah Oury sets foot in the dish: "We put the cart before the horse ..."

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Africaguinee June 21, 2021 6:58 a.m.

Dialogue / Bah Oury sets foot in the dish: "We put the cart before the horse ..."

So, we salute that and we encourage all our friends and brothers of the Ivory Coast to forget the resentments, to heal the wounds, to privilege the dynamics of restoration of confidence and not to privilege the spirit of ' 'revenge'.

You also notice that in Burkina-Faso, with all that has just happened with thousands of deaths and a million refugees displaced within Burkina Faso, they are meeting to try to start a dialogue.

policy in order to find a major consensus for the restoration of confidence with all Burkinabés.

I believe that the responsibility of the first magistrate of this country is to compete in this direction and not to go into exchanges which make Guinea recognized as being a country where, overnight, you end up with totally and diametrically opposed discourse with everything that can allow Guinea to come together, to inspire confidence in its population and of course abroad.

What is most important with regard to all the political and social actors in this country is to prioritize the national interest and not to dwell on anything that may constitute aspects of friction or the creation of new difficulties.

BAH OURY: Personally, I find that we have put the cart before the horse (...), the framework for dialogue as proposed and institutionalized by the decree is not in conformity.

So, it is something that seems surprising that a structure begins to be active without being constituted in accordance with the decree.

Former President Gbagbo returned to Côte d'Ivoire after a 10-year absence.

No not yet (…), I believe that the best is to rectify the course in accordance with the spirit of the decree to allow in the most solemn, the most rigorous way for the process of dialogue to be started for us.

allow the advancement of solutions to end the crisis that are sustainable and effective.

This requires solemn commitment and real involvement to find solutions to end the crisis for Guinea and not to replace the government at the risk of getting bogged down in multiple jurisdictional problems and not being able to propose solutions.

suitable solutions to anything.

Personally, I think that we should give priority to anything that can bring harmony within the country and a dimension of restoring confidence and cooperation between Guinea and all our neighboring countries.

We are faced with multidimensional crises, political, economic as well as social, institutional, security, etc.

Approaching dialogue through transport is as if we are losing sight of the essential.

The sectoral approach risks causing this structure to deal with ten thousand problems and not be able to provide effective, concrete solutions for their resolution.

I think approaching the problems as they started, talking about the transport sector, from a methodological point of view is problematic..

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