The election was originally planned to be held in June 2007, but was postponed to December 2007 due to a
general strike in January and February, which resulted in the appointment of a new government and Prime Minister. It was, however, subsequently considered likely that the election would be postponed another time to around March 2008 due to delays in setting up the
Independent National Electoral Commission (CENI) and the need for revision of electoral lists. A date for the election in November or December 2008 has been proposed. On 11 October 2007, Prime Minister
Lansana Kouyaté expressed regret regarding slowness in the organization of the election and said that it would be difficult to hold the election by December. Political parties had difficulty reaching an agreement on how many members should be on CENI. CENI was established in November 2007. On 12 February 2008, an
ad hoc commission responsible for determining a timetable for the election proposed that it be held between 23 November and 14 December 2008.
Sidya Touré of the
Union of Republican Forces, an opposition party, denounced the decision as "a political delay, not a technical one"; he also claimed that the government was unwilling to finance CENI and was inhibiting CENI's work. Touré warned against any further delay, saying that it would "lead to further despair and fresh protests".
Sekou Konate, the Secretary-General of the governing
Party of Unity and Progress (PUP), reacted positively to the delay: "People prefer a delay much more than having war straight away. If we do not have a clean electoral roll, we risk having things go wrong." According to Konate, holding the parliamentary election together with the 2009 local elections or the
2010 presidential election was out of the question. On 19 December 2008, it was announced that the election would be held on 31 May 2009. After the
military coup d'état in December 2008, civilian and political groups proposed to hold them in November 2009, before
presidential elections that were planned for December 2009 (although later delayed to 2010). The government set them for 11 October 2009 in late March 2009. The election was then again delayed until 16 March 2010. Following a political agreement and the 2010 presidential election, the parliamentary election was delayed again. In September 2011, the election date was announced as 29 December 2011. but in early December it was postponed again for security reasons and lack of organization until July 2012. In April 2012, the election was postponed indefinitely by
Guinea President
Alpha Condé. After a reshuffle in the Electoral Commission, the election was announced to be planned for 12 May 2013. They were later delayed to 30 June and then to 28 July. The date was moved again in early July, to 24 September, following a UN-mandated agreement between the parties. On 19 September, opposition leader Diallo called protests for Monday, 23 September, complaining of irregularities in voter lists and polling stations that would be impossible to fix before the 24 September elections. On 21 September, the UN mediator for Guinea announced a further delay to 28 September following talks between the parties, and the opposition cancelled their scheduled protests. ==Registration==