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News ID: 107377
Publish Date : 02 October 2022 - 21:27

Protesters Besiege French Embassy in Burkina Faso

OUAGADOUGOU (RT) – Crowds of protesters have tried to storm the French Embassy in Ouagadougou, after Burkina Faso’s special forces staged the second military coup in a year.
“Damiba has tried to retreat to the Kamboinsin French military base to prepare a counteroffensive in order to sow divide amongst our defense and security forces,” spokesman Lt. Jean Baptiste Kabre announced on state television on behalf of the new junta leadership.
France’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement denying any involvement in the events unfolding in Burkina Faso, and insisted that the “camp where the French forces are based has never hosted Paul Henri Sandaogo Damiba nor has our embassy.”
The French authorities advised citizens to stay home, as crowds of angry people gathered outside the perimeter of the French Embassy.
The protesters attempted to storm the diplomatic compound, pelted it with stones, and set fires at the entrance and around the perimeter of the facility, according to videos shared on social media.
Angry crowds also reportedly vandalized the French Institute in Burkina Faso’s second-largest city, Bobo-Dioulasso.
On Friday, a faction of the Burkina Faso military claimed power in Ouagadougou, in the second coup d’etat in the West African country this year. Captain Ibrahim Traore has replaced Lieutenant Colonel Paul-Henri Damiba at the head of the military junta.
Burkina Faso has a population of about 20 million and is landlocked between Mali and Niger in the north, and Benin, Togo, Ghana, and Cote d’Ivoire in the south. Along with its northern neighbors, it has been affected by the insurgency of militants allied with either Al-Qaeda or Daesh terrorist groups, which has reportedly been ramped up this year.
France, the former colonial power in the area, sent an expeditionary force known as ‘Operation Barkhane’ purportedly to fight the terrorists, without much progress. It was recently scaled back and renamed ‘Takuba Task Force’, after Mali ordered all French troops out and accused Paris of assisting the terrorists.