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Burkina Faso military confirms coup and dissolves transitional government Coup in Burkina Faso as military takes over country ahead of elections
(about 3 hours later)
The military in Burkina Faso has declared that it controls the country, confirming that a coup has taken place just weeks before elections.The military in Burkina Faso has declared that it controls the country, confirming that a coup has taken place just weeks before elections.
The announcement aired on national television and radio said the transitional government was dissolved and the interim president was no longer in power. The announcement, aired on national television and radio, said the transitional government was dissolved and the interim president was no longer in power.
The coup leaders, who come from an elite presidential guard unit that had disagreed publicly with the transitional government in recent months, identified themselves as the National Council for Democracy. A curfew was declared and borders were closed. Heavy gunfire was heard in the main square of the capital Ouagadougou after protesters poured into the streets to denounce the actions of the coup leaders, who are members of the elite presidential guard unit.
Their public statement confirmed what many suspected on Wednesday when the transitional president and prime minister were arrested and barricades were erected around the presidency. International condemnation of the arrests was swift, with the United Nations and the African Union demanding their immediate release. The elite guard, who had disagreed publicly with the transitional government in recent months, identified themselves as the National Council for Democracy and said they had taken control from a “deviant regime”.
The communique read by Lt Col Mamadou Bamba criticised the electoral code, which blocked members of the ex-president’s party from taking part in the 11 October elections. Anyone who supported the ex-president’s bid to amend the constitution so he could seek another term is also banned from running. The fate of the interim president, Michel Kafando, and the prime minister, Isaac Zida, who were both arrested after troops stormed into a cabinet meeting, was unclear.
Bamba on Thursday announced the beginning of a “coherent, fair and equitable process” that would lead to inclusive elections. The power-grab violated the country’s constitution. Interim parliament speaker, Cheriff Sy, urged the masses to “immediately rise up” to protest what he told Radio France International was “clearly a coup”.
The transitional government came to power after the president of 27 years, Blaise Compaoré, was ousted late last year in a public uprising. Demonstrators at one point had set fire to the parliament building to protest his move to amend the constitution so he could prolong his rule. The latest unrest comes just under a year after a much-praised popular uprising swept the old regime of long-serving leader Blaise Compaore from power.
Burkina Faso hosts French special forces and serves as an important ally of both France and the US in the fight against Islamic militants in west Africa. While Burkina Faso has largely been spared from extremist violence, a Romanian national was abducted in April, and a Mali-based jihadi group claimed responsibility. Compaore’s determined attempt to extend his 27-year rule was met with a mass revolt of rare vehemence by regional standards.
Protesters gathered in the streets in large numbers through October 2014 and set the parliamentary building on fire, forcing Compaore to flee into exile in neighbouring Cote D’Ivore.
The former president retained the loyalty of elements within the military, however, and electoral laws barring politicians who had supported electoral reforms to extend Compaore’s stay in office from running in elections due on 11 October seemed to have provided the coup plotters with an excuse to act.
In his address, Bamba announced the beginning of a “coherent, fair and equitable process” that would lead to inclusive elections.
But in an echo of the protests which ended Compaore’s time in office, crowds gathered with whistles and vuvuzelas near the presidential palace on Thursday morning, shouting “Down with the RSP”, an abbreviation for the presidential guard.
The headquarters of Compaore’s Congress for Democracy and Progress (CDP) party was ransacked in the evening.
Sy called the detention of the president and prime minister “a serious attack on the republic”.
“I call on all patriots to mobilise to defend the motherland,” he said. “Duty calls us because the Burkinabe nation is in danger. We call on the solidarity that active forces, political forces, civil society and the international community have with all the people of Burkina Faso to defeat this operation.”
The military power grab drew swift condemnation from many quarters. “The United States strongly condemns any attempt to seize power through extra-constitutional means or resolve internal political disagreements using force,” said the US State Department spokesman John Kirby.
The UN secretary-generalk, Ban Ki-moon, also expressed dismay after the presidential guard burst into a cabinet meeting. It comes less than a month before an election to complete a transition back to democracy after a popular uprising toppled Burkina’s long-time ruler last year.
“The secretary-general is outraged by reports of the detention of President Michel Kafando and Prime Minister Yacouba Isaac Zida of Burkina Faso,” Ban’s press office said in a statement. “The secretary-general calls for their immediate release. This incident is a flagrant violation of Burkina Faso’s constitution and transitional charter.”
In a joint statement, the United Nations, African Union and the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) demanded “the immediate and unconditional release of the hostages”.
The UN security council also “condemned in the strongest terms” the detentions and demanded the immediate release of all government officials.
“The members of the security council urged all actors in Burkina Faso to refrain from any violence,” the 15-nation council added in the statement, which diplomats said was drafted by France.
The turmoil in the west African country reflects the unease and instability which has been triggered by the desire of long-serving, often autocratic leaders in many parts of sub-Saharan Africa to change the law to drop term limits.
The tiny central African country of Burundi is locked in a power struggle between President Pierre Nkurunziza and opponents resisting his efforts to serve out a third term.
On Wednesday, the Democratic Republic of Congo president, Joseph Kabila, sacked two party leaders who had openly opposed his undeclared bid for a new term in office.
Similar efforts are underway in Rwanda and the Republic of Congo, drawing condemnation from critics who say they may reverse the democratic strides witnessed on the continent in the last two decades.