Coup in Burkina Faso ?

Burkina Faso: Coup d’état fears grow with President Kaboré’s location uncertain

By Jeune Afrique
Posted on Monday, 24 January 2022 09:13

Burkina Faso's President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré in Ouagadougou on 2 March 2019.
Burkina Faso’s President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré in Ouagadougou on 2 March 2019. © Sophie Garcia

Is a coup d’état underway in Burkina? Contradictory information is circulating after the mutinies that have agitated several camps and barracks in the country on Sunday 23 January. The situation of President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré is uncertain.

updated at 1050

According to several sources, the Burkinabe head of state was arrested on Sunday night.

THE PRESIDENT’S BULLET-RIDDEN JEEP

The circumstances are however unclear since those close to him said yesterday, while mutinies shook several military camps and barracks in the country, that Roch Marc Christian Kaboré was under the protection of the gendarmerie. He would now be in the Karpala camp in Ouagadougou.

Hooded soldiers

In the early hours of Monday 24 January, gunfire was again heard in the capital, particularly in the Patte d’Oie district, where the residence of the head of state is located.

Hooded soldiers took up positions in front of the headquarters of the national television.

Contacted by telephone, a member of the close entourage of the Burkinabe president said that the Prime Minister, Lassina Zerbo, and several members of the government were also arrested, but he did not specify their place of detention.

Sunday eruptions

Mutinies or an attempted putsch? On Sunday 23, the Burkina authorities quickly wanted to show that the situation was under control. At 8 am, the government published a communiqué calling on the population “to remain calm”.Africa InsightWake up to the essential with the Editor’s picks. Sign upAlso receive offers from The Africa ReportAlso receive offers from The Africa Report’s partners

It recognised “the shooting in some barracks”, but denied “the information conveyed on social networks to make people believe in a takeover by the army”.

READ MORE Islamic State, GSIM, al-Qaeda: The jihadist gold rush in Burkina Faso

An hour later, while heavy gunfire was still resounding at Camp Sangoulé Lamizana, which houses the Armed Forces Detention and Correction Centre (Maca), it was the turn of General Barthélémy Simporé, the Minister of Defence, to speak on national television, which had switched to special edition for the occasion.

“No institution of the Republic has been worried for the moment,” he said, adding that the movements observed “in some barracks” were “localised, circumscribed”, and that he was “in the process of getting in touch with those who are at work to understand the motives”.

Camp Lemizana attack

According to a senior source, the movement at Camp Lamizana was led by ten to twenty soldiers, led by an officer. According to this source, the leaders in the other barracks were from the same batch.

As the shooting became more and more sporadic, by mid-day, the theory of mutiny seemed to gain momentum. According to corroborating sources, the rebellious soldiers were essentially demanding from their superiors additional manpower and resources in the fight against jihadist groups, as well as the resignation of several high-ranking officers or security officials.

However, there was no question of the departure of President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré, who has been criticised in recent weeks for his management of the security crisis that is plaguing the country.

In a “safe place” all day, according to one of his relatives, the head of state was content with a tweet in the early afternoon to … encourage the Stallions, who played the same evening their round of 16 of the African Cup of Nations (CAN) in Cameroon. At the same time, demonstrators attacked the headquarters of his party, the People’s Movement for Progress (MPP), which was partially burnt and vandalised.

For several of the president’s loyalists, the possibility that some wanted to attempt a coup de force on Sunday should not be totally ruled out. “What questions us is the coordinated aspect of these mutinies in several barracks in the country and their coincidence with the banned demonstration yesterday in Ouagadougou,” said a senior official.

Since the attack on Inata on 14 November, which left 53 people dead and aroused anger and incomprehension in the army, rumours of a putsch have been stirring the country. These concerns have taken on greater substance since the arrest on 10 January of Lieutenant-Colonel Zoungrana, suspected of having wanted to foment a coup and a dozen other soldiers.

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