born January 9, 1922, Faranah, French Guinea [now Guinea] died March 26, 1984, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. in full Ahmed Skou Tour first president of the Republic of Guinea (195884) and a leading African politician. Although his parents were poor and uneducated, Tour claimed to be the grandson of Samory, a military leader who resisted French rule at the end of the 19th century, long after many other Africans had surrendered. Reared as a Muslim, Tour attended a French technical school at Conakry, from which he was expelled after one year for leading a food riot (1936). In 1940 Tour was hired as a clerk by a business firm, the Niger Franais, and the following year took an administrative assignment in the postal service. There he developed a strong interest in the labour movement and organized the first successful strike, lasting 76 days, in French West Africa. In 1945 he became secretary-general of the Post and Telecommunications Workers' Union and helped to found the Federation of Workers' Unions of Guinea, linked to the World Federation of Trade Unions, of which he later became vice president. Tour became active in politics in the mid-1940s and in 1946 helped Flix Houphout-Boigny of Cte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast) form the African Democratic Rally. Tour proved to be a powerful orator and was elected to the French National Assembly in 1951 as a representative from Guinea, but he was not allowed to take his seat. Reelected in 1954, he was again barred. After being elected mayor of Conakry by a large majority in 1955, he was finally permitted to take his place in the National Assembly the following year. By the end of 1957 Tour had become vice president of the Executive Council of Guinea. When French President Charles de Gaulle in 1958 offered French territories a referendum on whether to join a new federal community or to become independent, Tour and the Democratic Party of GuineaAfrican Democratic Rally led a successful campaign for independence. Guinea's voting population overwhelmingly rejected de Gaulle's offer and instead chose complete independence; Guinea was the only French colony in Africa that did not accept the proposal. On October 2, 1958, Guinea became the first independent French-speaking state in Africa, and shortly afterward Tour was elected its president. The French reacted by recalling all their professional people and civil servants and by removing all transportable equipment. Threatened by an economic breakdown, Tour accepted support from the communist bloc and at the same time sought help from Western nations. In African affairs Tour was an ardent supporter of Ghana's president Kwame Nkrumah and his program for African political unity, but a union of the two nations proclaimed in 1958 never became effective. When Nkrumah was deposed in 1966, Tour granted him asylum. After an unsuccessful invasion from neighbouring Portuguese Guinea (now Guinea-Bissau) in 1971, he undertook a political purge and imposed severe restrictions on opposition forces in his country. He was reelected without opposition in subsequent elections and ruled with an iron hand. Despite his harsh domestic policies, Tour was viewed in international politics as a moderate Islamic leader. In 1982 he led the delegation sent by the Islamic Conference Organization to mediate in the Iran-Iraq War; he also was a member in the Organization for African Unity (OAU).
TOUR, SKOU
Meaning of TOUR, SKOU in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012