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Burkina Faso: from popular uprising to military coup

As Burkina Faso’s military junta consolidates its position after seizing power in a coup, we look at the recent history of the troubled West African country. – 2014: Fall of Compaore – Blaise Compaore seizes power in a 1987 coup and cements his position four years later with the first of four election victories. But his 2010 win is contested, as is his attempt to amend the constitution to extend his rule. After being forced out by street protests in 2014, he flees to Ivory Coast. On November 29, 2015, former prime minister Roch Marc Christian Kabore is elected president. – 2015: Jihadist attacks – From 2015, the north of the country, the capital Ouagadougou and the east begin to suffer attacks and kidnappings by jihadists affiliated to Al-Qaeda or the so-called Islamic State group. On January 15, 2016, an attack on the Splendid hotel and a restaurant in Ouagadougou leave 30 dead, most of them Westerners, shocking the country. In November 2017, the French-backed G5 anti-jihadist force starts joint cross-border operations in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger. – 2018: Attacks intensify On March 2, 2018 simultaneous attacks target French forces and the former colonial power’s embassy, leaving eight soldiers dead and 85 people injured. The end of that year sees a state of emergency declared in several provinces. From 2019 the attacks become almost daily, prompting the sacking of the head of the armed forces and formation of a new government. On December 24, 42 people die in an attack by 200 jihadists on a military base in Arbinda, near the border with Mali. – 2020: Kabore re-elected – Kabore is re-elected on November 22, 2020, but insecurity means hundreds of thousands of people are unable to vote. The opposition accuse the president of election fraud and refuse to recognise the result. – 2021: Death toll soars – Between 132 and 160 people are killed in a June 2021 raid on the northeastern village of Solhan in the worst attack in six years. The killings spark demonstrations against insecurity and the ministers of defence and security are both fired. On August 18, an attack in the north leaves 65 civilians and 15 police dead. In October the president replaces the military chief of staff. A trial also begins into the killing 34 years earlier of charismatic former president Thomas Sankara, the “African Che Guevara”. Compaore, the main accused, is not present. On November 14, at least 57 people — 53 of them gendarmes — are massacred in an assault on a police station at Inata in the north, sparking further protests. Burkinabe and Niger military say they eliminated around 100 “terrorists” during an operation on their common border between November 25 and December 9. – Government reshuffle – On December 8, the prime minister resigns and hands the reins to Lassina Zerbo, who urges national unity. On December 23, 41 people are killed in yet another jihadist attack in the north. The past month sees a further spate of attacks and rumblings of discontent in the ranks of the armed forces echoing the wider population. – 2022: Military takeover – On January 22, police in Ouagadougou clash with demonstrators at a banned protest over the government’s handling of the jihadist threat. The following day soldiers at several army barracks stage a revolt. On Monday, Kabore is arrested by mutinous soldiers after gunshots are heard near his private residence. A group of officers later go on television to announce that the Patriotic Movement for Preservation and Restoration (MPSR) — the name of a junta led by Lieutenant-Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba — is in control. The United Nations, France and West African nations all condemn the coup, with the regional bloc ECOWAS suspending Burkina Faso on Friday.

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