"We've been working night and day," says truck driver Mamadouba Soumah, who was requisitioned for the cleanup.
On ministerial orders, in Soumah's words, the capital of dirt-poor Guinea has been scrubbed and primped to transform it into "the pearl of the world's lagoons."
The reason for the transformation has nothing to do with a visit by a foreign VIP or a major sporting event, but with literature.
Conakry is being enshrined as World Book Capital for the next 12 months.
As World Book Capital, a city gets the chance to showcase established and emerging literary talent, both from home and abroad, and to lure major book publishers.
It is also a golden opportunity for promoting talent in other areas -- theatre, music and cinema.
But to Guinea, the title also helps the country to literally turn the page on the 2013-16 Ebola epidemic that today burdens its image abroad.
One of the poorest countries in the world -- it ranks 145th in the World Bank's league table for gross domestic product (GDP) -- Guinea was awarded stellar marks by health watchdogs for rolling back Ebola with patient grassroots work, substituting for lack of funds and hi-tech help.
UNESCO has similarly singled out community involvement and literacy programmes to explain why it made such a seemingly unusual choice for 2017 World Book Capital.
"Books, learning and reading are key to human life," its director general Irina Bokova said.
"The strong investment of the Republic of Guinea in promoting books and literacy bears witness to a clear vision of culture and education as drivers of development and recovery."
The World Book Capital programme, launched today, celebrates culturally vibrant Senegal, a fellow francophone nation, as guest of honour.
Giant posters on Conakry's northern seafront avenue bear tribute to some of the heroes of African literature.
They include Leopold Sedar Senghor -- the Senegalese poet and former president who drove the "Negritude" movement that combined use of French with a distinct African cultural identity.
"If you are looking for some safe place to stash your money in Guinea, you hide it in a book. No-one around here will steal it," a history teacher quipped.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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