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CONAKRY (Reuters) - Guinea's military junta chief is in a "difficult" condition after an assassination attempt and a return to Guinea is not imminent, a junior French minister who works on relations with African countries said on Wednesday.
Captain Moussa Dadis Camara was shot on December 3 and later evacuated to Morocco, where he has been treated for head wounds. He has left behind a power vacuum and a divided military in the world's number one bauxite producer.
"Camara is in a condition that is apparently rather difficult, but in any case his life is not in danger," said Alain Joyandet, France's Secretary of State for Cooperation, speaking to reporters after the weekly cabinet meeting in Paris.
"In terms of his capacity to return to Guinea, I don't think it's reached that stage yet. For now he is in Morocco and for a certain amount of time, it would seem," Joyandet added.
Moroccan officials said on Sunday Camara was stable after an operation to treat "trauma of the cranium" but they have not given details on when he could be discharged from hospital.
Camara's Defence Minister Sekouba Konate has taken over as junta chief but as uncertainty about Camara's future grows, so does the risk of instability in Guinea spreading across a historically volatile region.
Bordering countries Liberia, Sierra Leone and Ivory Coast are trying to rebuild their economies and infrastructure after civil wars and are acutely sensitive to local disturbances.
Sierra Leone's President Ernest Bai Koroma said his country was securing its frontier with Guinea and preparing for a possible influx of refugees.
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