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Among poorest countries of Af. continent.   Approx. 50 ethnic groups in 11+million pop. in 2 major W.African cultural groups, Voltaic & Mande. Voltaic far more numerous & incl Mossi =almost ½ pop.   Muslim ½ pop. Other ½ female =80% ag prod.
8.4.84   All land & mineral wealth are nationalized. Country's name changed from colonial Upper Volta to Burkina Faso, words from 2 different local languages meaning "Land of the Incorruptible"   French colony for Niger River cotton labor 1896   Ind. 8.5.60   last mil.revolution 8.4.83   Thos. Sankara assassination 10.15.87   dem. constitution 6.91   4 parties in 1997 Assembly   45 provinces. High pop. density, distrib.uneven. Capital, central plateau most populated, large areas in north almost deserted. 3 languages other than French. Historically migrant labor source for neighbor states. Slave labor outlawed 1901, forced labor 1946. 1980s soil conservation pgm showing returns; comparative tolerant cultural tradition draws intl recognition.

  " … courage to invent the future. It took the madmen of yesterday for us to be able to act with extreme clarity today. I want to be one of those madmen. We must dare to invent the future."
Thos. Sankara,1985
The upright man   exerpted & exegesis
2006   Robin Shuffield

  he banned unions, a free press, anything which might stand in the way of his plans for the immediate and radical transformation of society.
  [ Robt Mugabe ? No, Thos Sankara ]

He started an ambitious road and rail building program to tie the nation together, eschewing any foreign aid by relying on his country’s greatest resource, the energy and commitment of its own people.
  [ modern Myanmar ? No, Sankara's press gangs ]

He redistributed land from the feudal landlords and gave it directly to the peasants. Wheat production rose in just three years from 1700 kg per hectare to 3800 kg per hectare, making the country food self-sufficient.
As opposition mounted, he attempted to repress it. He established Peoples Revolutionary Tribunals in towns and workplaces around the country where people were tried without counsel for being corrupt officials, counter-revolutionaries or just lazy workers, based not on credible evidence just private grudges.

He also encouraged the formation of Revolutionary Defense Committees, gangs of armed youth who terrorized ordinary citizens. When the nation’s school teachers went on strike, he dismissed all of them, leaving the education system, his country’s greatest hope for progress, a shambles.
  [ Mao Tsetung? No, Thos Sankara ]

By 1986 Sankara’s rapid, sometimes authoritarian changes had begun to alienate larger sectors of the Burkinabe population, leaving him more isolated, even from elements in his own ruling circle.
“Sankara was an impatient man,” driven by the desperation of his people.  


Who killed the lion king?
1995   New Internationalist

… Sankara led revolution between 1983 & 1987 … one of most creative & radical Africa produced … genuine alternative to Western-style modernization …

An incorruptible man
A major anti-corruption drive began in 1987. The tribunal showed Capt. Thos. Sankara to have $450 a month salary; his most valuable possessions a car, 4 bikes, 3 guitars, a fridge and a broken freezer. He was the world's poorest president. Sankara refused to use air conditioning in his office on grounds that such luxury was not available to anyone but a handful of Burkinabes.When asked why he did not want his portrait hung in public places, Sankara said "There are 7 million Thomas Sankaras".

Chronicle of a revolution
2.84   Tribute payments to & obligatory labour for traditional village chiefs outlawed.
84.84   All land & mineral wealth are nationalized. Country's name changed from colonial Upper Volta to Burkina Faso, words from two different local languages meaning 'Land of the Incorruptible'.
9.22.84   Day of solidarity: men are encouraged to go to market and prepare meals to experience for themselves conditions faced by women.
10.84   Rural poll tax is abolished.
11.84   'Vaccination Commando'. In 15 days 2.5million children are immunized against meningitis, yellow fever and measles.
12.3.84   Top civil servants & military officers are required to give month's pay and other civil servants to give half a month to help fund social development projects.
12.31.84   All domestic rents are suspended for 1985 and a massive public housing construction program begins.
1.1.85   Launch of campaign to plant 10million trees to slow Sahara's advance.
8.4.85   All-women parade marks anniversary of Revolution.
9.10.85   Mounting hostility of region's conservative regimes revealed at meeting in Yamoussoukro, Côte d'Ivoire.
Feb-Apr 1986   'Alpha Commando' literacy campaign in 9 indigenous languages involves 35,000 people.
End of 1986   UN-assisted program brings river blindness under control.

#10017067 Sinoufo Region photo D.Deriaz UNESCO 10.15.87   Sankara is assassinated in a coup d'état along with 12 aides. Makeshift grave a shrine for days; thousands pay respects. Popular feeling forces new regime to give Sankara decent grave.

villager's assessment of Sankara
'I wasn't surprised when he was killed; the Revolution took me by surprise but that didn't. He had bad men around him, people who just wanted to get fat and drive around in big cars. Many things changed in the Revolution. Not always in the best way. But because of the Revolution we know a little more about the type of politicians we need. It taught us to work by ourselves for ourselves. But Sankara wanted everything to happen too quickly; he expected too much.
If I were President myself I would do just as Sankara did and send my ministers out to the villages to learn what it's like there and give the peasants help. Sankara's very best idea was to teach us that it wasn't enough to live with what we get in wages each month; we should get by with the minimum and give the rest to the development of the country instead of always asking for aid from overseas."

An eminently corruptible man
Capt. Blaise Compaoré played a key part in the 1983 Revolution; he led the march on the capital that released Sankara from house arrest to become President. Compaoré himself served as Justice Minister & Sankara's effective second-in-command. … One of his early acts was to buy a presidential plane to reflect his personal prestige. …

villager's assessment of Compaoré
" … trade unions bought off, for example … He's our President, we agreed to that – but his policies come from France. Every order comes from France and he never asks the Assembly's opinion. There is no real opposition. Politics here means who will give money. People who want to become ministers or deputies look to develop themselves first and the country after; they all know the Western way of life, they want everything easy. Politics is just a means of becoming rich and giving you a big car. And Blaise gives money to opposition groups so they will divide and, voilà, no opposition. Another Sankara simply couldn't arrive out of the current democratic landscape."


Chronicle of a 'rectification'
10.15.87   Compaoré assumes Presidency, backed by Maj. Jean-Baptiste Lingani & Capt. H. Zongo.
11.87   Committees for Defence of the Revolution, the local bodies which had replaced traditional élites, are abolished.
1988   Civil servants salaries are increased; special tax that forced them to contribute to health & education projects is scrapped.
12.88   World Bank report lauds unusually high standards of financial management in Burkina Faso during the revolutionary years while noting the increasing incidence of corruption since Compaoré's takeover.
9.89   Lingani & Zongo attempt to oust Compaoré in coup and are executed.
12.31.89   Sankara supporters detained without trial for over a year. Lecturer Guillaume Sessouma dies during torture.
12.90   Draft constitution guarantees freedom of association & expression and property rights. Provides for an elected President & National Assembly.
Early 1991   Structural-adjustment pkg agreed with IMF involving privatization & liberalization of the market.
5.91& All political prisoners are released.
12.91& Blaise Compaoré wins presidential election. He is only candidate;73% of electorate do not vote.
1993   IMF lends Burkina $67m for 1993-5 on condition it continues implementing free-market policies.
1.94   CFA franc halved in value in relation to the French franc at the insistence of Paris & IMF.
3.94   Compaoré sacks PM to install loyalist

    letter to President Compere   from HRWatch
    3.28.00   Joost R. Hiltermann Exec. Dir. Arms Div.
… Burkina Faso's possible role in violations of intl arms embargoes imposed on human rights abusers. Recent UN report named Burkina Faso in connection with violations of sanctions imposed on UNITA rebels in Angola who have been responsible for gross human rights abuses & systematic violations of intl humanitarian law. The "Report of the Panel of Experts on Violations of Security Council Sanctions Against UNITA," released on March 15, concluded in part that "it is highly likely that arms legally sold & transported to Burkina Faso have been diverted by Burkinabe authorities to UNITA in breach of Security Council sanctions." In addition, independent Human Rights Watch investigations into weapons flows to abusive rebel forces in Sierra Leone & Angola have raised very serious questions about the witting or unwitting role of Burkina Faso as country of transshipment for internationally proscribed weapons flows.

Evidence suggests large weapons shipments Burkina Faso declared it was purchasing for its own use may in fact have been illegally diverted to other end-users, and that Burkinabe govt resources, including the VIP wing of the Ougadougou airport & a govt-registered plane, may have been used to facilitate such diversions. April 1999 ECOMOG commander in Sierra Leone, Maj.-Gen. Felix Mujakperuo, accused Burkina Faso of facilitating an illegal arms shipment to Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebels in Sierra Leone in violation of a UN embargo. At press conference in Freetown, he claimed that on 5.14.99, a Ukrainian-registered cargo plane had delivered sixty-eight tons of weapons & ammunition to Ouagadougou. There, he alleged, the plane parked in the airport's VIP terminal and the weapons were transferred onto a plane destined for Liberia, which is also subject to a U.N. arms embargo, then shipped onward to the RUF inside Sierra Leone. Mujakperou also reported the incident to the UN.

The Ukrainian govt responded to these allegations in 6.1.99 letter to U.N. committee responsible for monitoring RUF embargo, to which it appended relevant documents. Ukraine maintained that it had sold the weapons to Burkina Faso govt. Documents provided, of which Human Rights Watch obtained copies, show Burkina Faso govt issued an end-user certificate to the Ukrainian state- owned company Ukrspetsexport for the purchase of weapons & ammunition in a deal arranged by the Gibraltar-based Chartered Engineering & Technical Company, Ltd. The end- user certificate explicitly states that the ministry of defense of Burkina Faso, "the final consumer" of the goods listed, was committing itself to refrain from re-exporting the equipment without the agreement of the govt of Ukraine.
The Gibraltar-based company then contracted a trade agent of the Ukrainian air carrier Antonov Design Bureau, the British company Air Foyle, to fly the goods to Burkina Faso. According to the documents, flight ADB1737, an Antonov-124 (registration UR- 82008), carried 67,564 kilograms of "defense equipt & ammunition" from Kiev to Ouagadougou on 3.13.99.

The end-user certificate indicates that the deal involved 3,000 AKM (Kalashnikov) assault rifles, fifty machine guns, twenty-five rocket-propelled grenade launchers (RPGs), five Strela-3 (also known as SA-7) missiles, and five Metis anti-tank guided missile systems, as well as ammunition for these weapons. It is important to note that, according to an authoritative source on national arms inventories, Jane's Infantry Weapons, Burkina Faso has been using NATO

Burkina Faso's government has created a commission to control the proliferation of light weapons and oversee implementation of the international ban on anti-personnel mines. The commission was established following the decision in January 2001, by African countries, to act against the circulation of light and small weapons. In Dec. 2000, Burkina Faso decided to set up a body to monitor weapons imports amid persistent allegations that it was a source of weapons for anti-government forces in Sierra Leone and Angola. The UN has since accused Burkina Faso of violating the embargo on trade in arms and diamonds with RUF and Unita rebel forces.
    Burkina Faso denies arming RUF rebels
    5.23.00   ANN/IRIN
Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso   Burkina Faso has denied as "crude", accusations that it is supplying arms to the rebel Revolutionary United Front (RUF), according to news reports. The latest accusation came from an alliance of three opposition parties formed on Sunday and called La Convention panafricaine des sankaristes. Formed in the memory of late Burkina Faso leader Thomas Sankara, killed in a 1987 coup, the party condemned the government's "interference in the internal affairs of other African countries, in flagrant violation to the OAU charter". `The Guardian' of Lagos cited Burkina Faso's govt as saying in a communique: "It is surprising that, in light of the overall evolution of the African political context, one can accuse Burkina Faso of supporting one component of the Sierra Leonean society against another by supplying it with arms."
    Burkina denies violating sanctions against Unita
    3.13.00   PANA
Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso   Burkina Faso has denied the contents of a UN Security council report implicating it and its president Blaise Compaore in violating sanctions against the Angolan rebel Unita movement of Jonas Savimbi. "Burkina is not at all involved in the violation of sanctions imposed on Unita," foreign minister Youssouf Ouedraogo told the press Sunday. UN security council report Friday accused some African leaders including Compaore & Togo Pres. Gnassingbe Eyadema of violating military & diamond trade embargo imposed on Unita. Ouedraogo said the Burkinabe govt was surprised & amazed the expert committee could "specifically implicate Pres. Compaore." Burkinabe govt, in accordance with freely agreed intl commitments, always subscribed to resolutions adopted by the UN security council, incl those on Angola, he noted.
Citing how the external policy of Burkina Faso is based on the search for peace, Ouedraogo recalled that the country, while chairing the OAU in 1998-1999, strongly condemned Unita and Jonas Savimbi and urged Africans to solve crises and conflicts through dialogue and consultation. He also denied the existence of training camps for Unita forces in Burkina. According to Ouedraogo, Burkina is making continuous efforts for a lasting solution to the Angolan crisis under the aegis of the Lusaka peace agreement and UN security council resolutions.He, therefore, said Burkina could not have any link with Unita. "We are going to raise these charges during Wednesday's session of the security council and ask the committee of experts for an explanation", he emphasised.
standard weaponry for its armed forces and has no known armaments deriving from the former Warsaw Pact. As a consequence, we believe it unlikely that Burkina Faso would have ordered & purchased for its own defense needs the quantities of weapons from the former Soviet Union provided in the shipment described.

In another case, Burkina Faso also was named as a transshipment country for weapons that were delivered to Sierra Leone. In an Oct. 1999 article published in the Washington Post, author James Rupert reported that ECOMOG said 5 aircraft, incl one whose registration matched that of a Boeing 727 owned by the Burkinabe govt, had carried weapons to the RUF via Liberia. Quoting ECOMOG, Rupert told HRWatch that the flights from Ouagadougou to Robertsfield Intl Airport in Liberia took place in Feb. & Sept. 1998, and that the Burkinabe Boeing 727-14, registration number XT-BBE, "was seen offloading arms on 26 & 29 February 1998, each time after flying Rabat [Morocco]-Ouagadougou-Robertsfield."
Interviews conducted by HRWatch in Burkina Faso in June 1998 further suggest that flights to parties under intl embargo regularly transited through Ouagadougou airport. Pilots & staff indicated that flights carrying arms or fuel regularly arrived from central Africa to refuel in Ouagadougou on their way to other destinations. An official at the airport said, "It can be one of any number of locations: Kinshasa, Brazzaville, UNITA. We don't ask questions."
In light of these serious allegations, we urge you to immediately appoint an independent commission to carry out a full inquiry. We further request that you make public the methodology of the inquiry and its findings at the earliest possible date.


N. Zongo Tole Sagnon
5.97 interview Norbert Zongo by Keith Snow

Ouagadougou   Burkinabe Pres.Compaore said he was willing to hold early parliamentary elections, if that proved necessary in 2000 for the representation of all political views in the national assembly. In New Year address Fri. night, Compaore stressed that consolidation & enhancement of democracy in B,Faso were the guarantees for sustainable development & social peace. He acknowledged that socio-political protests following death of journalist Norbert Zongo were the expression of a greater demand for democracy & social justice. According to Compaore, this tragedy (Zongo's death) was a catalyst call for reforms at socio-political level and in the judiciary so as to strengthen the process of democratisation & good governance. He expressed regrets to all victims of abuse by the state, to families bereaved by crimes in the country's political history.
Zambia said he favoured a review of the electoral law & the constitution, esp. the article that limits presidential mandates to two terms, changing the voting system and the status of the opposition. Compaore also approved the recommendations of the ad hoc commission on political reforms. He promised to make the necessary arrangements for a rearrangement of the country's political landscape. Observers described the goodwill gestures as moves aimed at bringing the coalition of democratic organisations & political parties back to the negotiating table.
    Burkina Faso
    1999   CPJ
Pres. Blaise Compaoré seized power in 1987 before seeking legitimacy through the ballot box in 1991 & again in 1998. But his regime still draws much of its authority from the army, esp. from infamous Presidential Guard Regiment (RSP), which local independent journalists blamed for several extrajudicial killings last year. It remains dangerous to criticize the RSP & other key pro-Compaoré institutions. As a result, many independent reporters engage in self-censorship. … Pres. Compaoré promised his govt will not meddle in work of Independent Commission of Inquiry, set up to investigate the murders. But even though provisions of the 1990 Information Code that gave the state legal powers to intimidate the press were removed in December 1993, regime's old, autocratic habits persist. Members of Paris-based press freedom advocacy group Reporters Sans Frontières expelled from Burkina Faso in May & Sept. while attempting to gauge progress of the Zongo investigation.
Early Dec., Compaoré regime charged 7 members of local independent journalists & human- rights advocates coalition Le Collectif with having undermined state security by organizing Nov. 27 demonstration of 70,000 people calling for clarity in the Zongo investigation. … All charges against members of Le Collectif were dropped on December 28. Although the government has agreed to pay financial compensation to the families of Zongo and the other victims, six presidential guardsmen considered serious suspects in the killings have not yet been brought to book. Meanwhile, the judge who charged François Compaoré with murder was removed from the case. After the civilian court indicted three senior military officials attached to the RSP, the case was transferred to a military tribunal. But no trial date had been set by year's end, and there were also constitutional objections to trying the civilian Compaoré in a military court.
FREETOWN, Sierra Leone   In 1970s & '80s, international terrorism training was centered in Libya. Col. Moammar Gaddafi, using his oil wealth to spread his vision of pan-African revolution, hosted & trained thousands of men, some of whom are now rulers of African countries. Alliances formed then still shape politics & wars of west Africa. Despite Libya's public disavowals, it still participates in regional tensions fomented by the alumni of its training camps. It was at a Libyan camp that Senegalese Ibrahim Bah trained before joining Islamic resistance fighters in Afghanistan, and then fighting with Hezbollah in Lebanon.

In late 1980s, Bah returned to Libya and met Charles Taylor, now president of Liberia. Taylor was then being trained to launch a rebellion against govt of Samuel K. Doe. Bah also met Foday Sankoh, who, with a small cadre of men, would soon establish the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) and go to war against the government of Sierra Leone. Taylor's introduction to Gaddafi had been secured by Blaise Compaore, a zealous officer in the army of Burkina Faso and now that country's president. He is a close friend of Bah's. Through the ensuing decade, the ties among the 4 men: Bah, Taylor, Sankoh and Compaore, have remained strong. Bah fought with both Taylor's Liberian rebels & Sankoh's RUF, and he now resides in Burkina Faso. Sankoh created the RUF with the help of the 3 others. When they became heads of state, Compaore & Taylor were able to ensure a steady flow of weapons to their allies in the region.

Through his international contacts in the illicit diamond & arms trade, Bah has helped each man become enormously wealthy, according to intelligence sources and others who know all 4 well. In exchange, Bah enriched himself & the movements he supports. He also secured political clout & govt protection, incl false passports. Described by those who know him as quiet, serious and a religious Muslim, Bah's main RUF contact was notorious sr commander Sam Bockerie, aka Mosquito. Bockerie fell out with the RUF and fled to Liberia in Dec. 1999, where he stayed under protection of Taylor. Taylor, Bah and dozens of senior Liberian govt officials are under U.N. imposed travel ban & economic sanctions because of their alleged role in illicit diamonds-for-weapons trade the RUF used to keep its military supplied.

Taylor & Compaore repeatedly have denied involvement. Sankoh is now imprisoned in Sierra Leone, and the RUF he founded, under new leadership, signed a peace agreement with the govt and began to disarm its combatants. That peace process, according to RUF officials, Western intelligence analysts and U.N. investigators, would end RUF control over Sierra Leone's diamond fields, cutting off the flow of money through Bah to Taylor & Compaore. With control of the diamond fields threatened, Western intelligence sources said, there are several strong indicators that the old Libyan network is moving to protect its interests. Over the past 6 months, the sources said, Libya has sent several large shipments of weapons to Taylor.

In mid-Sept., Bockerie, in violation of the U.N. travel ban, visited Burkina Faso capital Ouagadougou, staying at the presidential lodge, according to a U.N. report & knowledgeable sources. On Sept. 26, Bockerie & Bah flew to Libya on an official Chad govt airplane, the sources said. Intelligence sources say they believe Bockerie & Bah traveled on behalf of Taylor & Compaore to seek aid from Gaddafi. The aid, the sources said, would support a Bockerie-led insurgency that would enter Sierra Leone from Liberia and keep control of the diamond fields. "There is an axis that is extremely dangerous that seems willing to plunge the region into war to keep control of the diamond fields," said an intelligence source in the region. "If it were just Bockerie, or even Bockerie & Taylor, it would not be of such concern. But if Libya is involved and we have diamonds already going to terrorist organizations, we have serious trouble."

French radio reported thousands of Burkina Faso nationals fleeing Ivory Coast town of Tabou, and attempting to return to Burkina Faso aboard buses. Exodus followed a land dispute between between members of Ivorian Krumen community and Burkinabes, which escalated into violence. B.Faso is concerned with precipitous increase in Tuareg (Mali) refugees into the counry.. In 1993 there were approximately 9,000, in 1994 the number is between 45,000 and 50,000. 4.16.01 S/2001/363 addendum to Monitoring Mechanism on Angola Sanctions final report (S/2000/1225)
Findings on arms-brokering companies; UNITA representation and travel & residence of senior UNITA officials and their adult family members; diamond trading; petroleum & petroleum products; and measures taken by Member States of Southern African Development Community to strengthen implementation of sanctions against UNITA.

4.11.01   S/2001/351 SecGen rpt   Developments since prev. rpt (S/2000/977)

Monrovia, Liberia President Charles Taylor has offered two companies to the proposed 3,000 strong Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) peacekeeping force for Sierra Leone. His counterpart in Burkina Faso, President Blaise Compaore told Gabon's Africa No 1 radio on Saturday that his country was also ready to take part in the Sierra Leone peace process and provide troops for ECOWAS. Taylor visited Burkina Faso late last week. ECOWAS Director of Information Adrienne Diop told IRIN on Monday that they had not yet received a formal offer from Liberia and Burkina Faso, both of which have have denied frequent allegations that they back the RUF. Meanwhile, the UN Special Representative Oluyemi Adeniji told reporters on Friday in Freetown that the UN Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) and ECOWAS had given Taylor a mandate to act as an interlocutor with the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) over the return of UN vehicles and equipment captured by the rebels. "One can be reasonably optimistic that many of these weapons will surface," Adeniji said. However, Taylor said recently that the likelihood of recovering weapons was slim. President Charles Taylor also expressed opposition to Britain's arming the Sierra Leone Army (SLA) and called on the UN and ECOWAS to ensure that only peacekeepers in the country carry arms, Radio Liberia International reported on Monday. Britain announced some two weeks ago that it would supply the SLA with arms and ammunition, following the resurgence of hostilities by the rebels. Sahel development

Long-dormant gold industry of Burkina Faso has become that nation's second largest source of revenue, after cotton; much of the initial investment capital came from the United States and Canada.

… George Milling-Stanley, market analyst for World Gold Council, "Gold mining is often one of the first ways in which western capital finds its way to developing countries." …
May 1999 Britain sold 25 metric tons of gold from central bank reserves & another 25 tons in July. Britain plans to continue auctioning off 25 tons every other month until they have sold a total of 415 tons, in effort to place more reserves in currency, incl US dollar, Japanese yen and euros. May British sale took gold prices to $253oz, a 20-year low, from over $280 an ounce, causing unemployment and hurting Africa foreign exchange earnings. World Gold Council, industry-supported trade group intended to encourage gold consumption, est. price drop already cost developing nations $150million in foreign exchange earnings. This summer 6 S.African mines announced 11,000 worker layoffs plan; Ashanti Goldfields, largest Ghana mining co. plans 2,000 work force cuts.
IMF planned to auction 300 tons of gold reserves to raise $2 billion for debt relief for developing countries; opposition will probably force it change to its mind. "IMF must look at some other means of supporting distressed countries that depend heavily on gold to fund their economies instead of selling gold, especially when the price of the commodity is already down," said Fred Ohene Kena, mines & energy minister for Ghana, 10th rank world gold prod. & leading seasonal employer of migrant Burkinabe labor in mines.   4. Major gold producers in sub-Saharan Africa
Burkina Faso
In 1990-97, Burkina Faso's economy grew faster than the population at 4.1% a year compared with 2.8%. Despite this increasing national prosperity, the incomes of 65% of the rural population were below two-thirds of the national mean. Agriculture accounts for more than a third of GDP and supports as many as 90% of the population. Agricultural productivity is constrained by lack of water & fertilisers and low technology. Exports are dominated by cotton (36.3% of 1996 total), livestock &anp; derivative products (22%), and gold. All fuel and many other raw materials & intermediate goods must be imported, so the trade and the current accounts are in deficit, the latter by about $300m in 1996-97.

Burkina Faso easily qualifies as a candidate for HIPC initiative. Its total debt was $1.3bn at the end of 1996, 51% of GNP. The debt service ratio is limited because 84% of the long-term debt is on concessional terms with low interest rates & long pay-back periods. Under the HIPC initiative, debt should be reduced by $115m by 2000 providing the country continues the implementation of economic reforms. The country receives large quantities of aid, both bilateral & multilateral; net official development assistance flows were $418m in 1996, accounting for 65% of investment and 10.6% of GDP. France is largest donor, typically giving about a quarter of the total, followed by Germany, Netherlands, Denmark and Japan. Multilateral aid comes from the EU, the IDA, the African Development Bank, the IMF and the UN Development Pgm.
A key part of the govt's development plans is exploitation of country's large mineral resources. As well as gold, there is potential for diamonds, manganese, copper, zinc and bauxite among others. As a share of officially recorded GDP, investment has been quite high, at 25% in 1997. Public investment accounted for around 11% of GDP in that year. In 1993 a new Mining Code was enacted, providing tax & other concessions for investment in the mining sector. This was updated, with concessions for foreign investors made more liberal, in 1997.

Gold's importance to Burkina Faso
Burkina Faso has large but underexploited mineral reserves. Gold is the dominant element in the mining sector; its development is a key feature of current policy. Currently it is the third largest export after cotton & livestock; its contribution is expected to rise. Further liberalisation of mining regulations in 1997 facilitated the award of four new exploration contracts that year, bringing the total number of exploration permits in operation to 137. Investment in mining potential was estimated at CFA 25bn ($42.8m) in 1997, nearly 2% of GDP. Poura, the largest deposit, has reserves estimated at around 25 tons. The mine, previously source of most of the country's gold output, underwent rehabilitation under lease to Sahelian Goldfields which will own 90% of the project, while the state will hold 10%. It was officially reopened Oct. 1998, which should give 1999 exports a substantial boost. Sahelian Goldfields hopes to raise production to 4 ton per year. Other companies active in Burkina Faso are … In total the govt hopes total gold production might reach 6 tons/yr by 2000. If plans are fulfilled, gold should account for at least 10% of exports that year.
Much gold output has been produced by semi-industrial and artisanal methods, supported by the state-owned purchasing and marketing monopoly, the Comptoir Burkinabe des Metaux Precieux, although this will change with the reopening of Poura. Official data for production are lower than those of GFMS, which allows for informal & unrecorded output. Export data are from official sources and exclude gold traded via parallel channels. In volume terms, gold output fell by 12.9% a year between 1990-97 to 2.3 tons. Production in 1998 rose slightly to 2.7 ton. The value of exports has tended to fall because of the drop in output and 1997 steep fall in the intl price of gold although the effect on the economy was partly offset by the devaluation of the CFA franc in 1994.
Despite this fall in export revenues deriving from gold, gold exports were still sufficient to cover more than a quarter of the country's debt-service obligations in 1997. They would have played an even greater role were it not for the sharp fall in the international price of gold in 1997.
Gold in subSaharan Africa
tons Output 1997 tons Output 1998 1997 Merchandise exports $m 1997 $m Gold exports Gold exports as % merchandise exports Gold exports as % debt service
Burkina Faso 2.3 2.7 397 18ª 4.5 38
Côte d'Ivoire 4.0 3.4 4,085 20ª 0.5 2
DR Congo 9.6 4.8 1,395 11 0.8 22ª
Ethiopia 2.8 2.9 604 15ª 2.5 3
Ghana 55.7 73.3 1,511 593 39.2 97
Guinea 7.1 13.1 797 100ª 12.5 14ª
Mali 17.1 22.0 562 202 35.9 272
Namibia 2.3 1.9 1,441 27 1.9 na
S.Africa 492.5 473.8 30,935 5,398 17.4 na
Sudan 4.7 5.7 580 49 8.4 86
Tanzania 5.3 5.5 717 2 0.3 1¹
Uganda na na 671 65ª 9.7 48 ¹
Zimbabwe 26.3 27.1 2,490 250ª 10.0 45¹
Others 7.3 7.0 40,893 30 0.1 na
Total 637.0 643.2 87,078 6,780 7.8 na
Total ex. S.Africa 144.5 169.4 56,143 1,382 2.5 na
Total SSA H IPCs 115.9 140.4 44,600 1,105 2.5 na
ª WGC estimate
¹ 1996 9.02
Burkina Faso economic indicators
1990 1997 1998ª av. annual % growth 1990-97
midyear pop. 10.95 11.4 2.8
GDP nominal ($m) 2,765 2,441 na -1.7
GDP 1990 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998ª av. annual % growth 1990-97
GDP at constant (1987) prices ($m) 2,284 2,553 2,584 2,681 2,847 3,035 na 4.1
Real GDP % change -1.5 -0.8 1.2 3.8 6.2 6.64 .5 4.1
Real GDP/head % change 0.0 -3.7 -1.7 0.9 3.4 3.9 na 1.3
GDP/head (current $) 306.5 209.1 183.7 226.2 238.1 222.9 na -4.6
External sector
Merchandise exports ($m)
287 341 308 405 422 397 na 4.7
Merchandise imports ($m) 542 541 349 485 560 544 na 0.0
Current account balance ($m) -92 -205 -106 -207 -306 -290 na
Exchange rate (CFA fr:$ ann. av.) 272.3 283.2 555.2 499.1 511.6 583.7 590.0
Foreign Debt
Debt ($m)
834 1,117 1,129 1,267 1,294 1,297 na
Debt as % of GDP 30.2 54.5 60.9 54.0 51.0 54.2 na
Debt service ($m) 68.5 82.5 73.3 67.6 73.0 47.6 na
Debt-service ratio (%) 18.6 24.2 23.8 16.7 17.3 12.0 na
ª   EIU & WGC est.
Burkina Faso gold data
1990 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 av. annual % growth 1993-98
Output (tonnes), G FMS na 4.0 3.0 2.7 2.5 2.3 2.7 -7.6
Output (tonnes), national source 2.5 1.9 1.2 1.4 0.9 na na na
Value $m ª na 46.3 37.1 33.3 31.2 24.5 25.5 -11..2
Exports
Value of exports ($m)
na na 9.7 23.2 18.6 na na na
Gold exports as % of total exports na na 3.2 5.7 4.4 na na
Gold exports as % debt service na na 13.3 34.4 25.4 na na
Average price ($/oz) 383.59 359.82 384.15 384.05 387.87 331.29 294.09
ª   GFMS output times annual gold price

in depth academic dissertations on BF women's roles OUAGADOUGOU   Burkina Faso women are demanding their share of a $700 million US dollar windfall to the govt through Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative. Classified among African continent's poorest countries, Burkina Faso recently benefited from cancellation of half its foreign debt, $700billion US. Intl Development Assoc. (IDA) of World Bank & IMF asserted Burkina Faso met conditions stipulated in Initiative thus eligible for first phase of debt cancellation which, in this case is approximately 400 million dollars. After evaluating sustained social & structural reforms as well as commitment of country to reducing poverty, IDA & IMF estimate Burkina is eligible to receive addtl assistance of $300 million dollars. Thus, the country has extra $700million dollars at its disposal.
Authorities indicate they would like to allocate these resources to the social sector; women demanded govt specify what belongs to them at the outset. ''It is necessary that Burkinabe women concretely see their fair share of this benefit which will enable them to fight poverty & achieve a better future,'' affirmed Madeleine Ouangrawa, head of B.Faso's Coalition of Women's Assoc.& NGOs. The women already defined their priorities. Majority think investment in women's education, great number believe money should ensure economic freedom for those who make up over half of Burkina Faso's 11 million people. For Ouangrawa, who took part in the Special Gen.Assembly of UN in June, priority education. June meeting was held to review the progress nations had made in implementing the Beijing Platform of Action, adopted at 1995 4th World Conf. on Women in China. ''Shown in New York there is intrinsic link between poverty & level of education,'' explained Ouangrawa. ''When a country educates both men & women, benefits are automatically felt in hygiene, health and citizenship,'' she said. Amadou Yaro, an accountant, said, ''I would have liked to see this reduction accompanied by certain conditions. The govt should inject this surplus in the social sectors, with accountability ... History abounds with examples of countries which received a lot of money only to squander it.''

1995 to 1997, B.Faso devoted 3.6% of GNP annually to education. Despite this, one of lowest levels of education in the world. 1997 per UN Development Pgm (UNDP), primary education rate was 25% for boys 16% for girls. Burkinabe women take an active part in economic development. Authorities should stress economic independence of women. ''It is not possible to have emancipation without economic independence. It is necessary for us to stress to the authorities the need to give women the means of becoming true agents of development, instead of simply being consumers,'' says journalist Nathalie Some. ''We must assure in each field, pgms incl co-ordination pgm between NGOs, govt & media,'' Some said. The Summit in NY invited govts to create development funds for women. … Usually, women receive small loans from institutions such as the Funds for Support of the Gainful Activities of Women (FAARF). But these cannot come close to solving numerous problems women have. Clementine Ouedraogo, president of Promo-Femmes-Developpement, association which assists women on administrative & domestic matters, says women should be given subsidies to satisfy their economic needs. ''Poverty in most areas is so severe that the small credit is not sufficient. When the women refund their loans, then, with 100 percent repayment, that does not mean they are doing well; it means that not to lose face within their community, some prefer to be impoverished more, even going to the extent of selling their goods, to refund these credits," affirms Ouedraogo.
Women, 52% of B.Faso population, produce nearly 80% of agricultural production. Because of socio-cultural situations, women are prevented from fully playing their role as catalysts of development.
[ Half the population is Muslim. Women's opportunity will remain unlikely. ]

Paris   Recommendation made by a commission set up in Burkina Faso to investigate the death of journalist Nobert Zongo, but which went further to suggest that assassinated former President Thomas Sankara be accorded a national hero status, has received wide support by the African community in Paris. Women from Burkina Faso met to deliberate on what they termed "the women's fight against unpunished crimes" in their country. According to the women, "rape cases of women by the Burkinabe military as well as state-instigated violence," were some of the issues they focused during the day-long debate Saturday.
While the 1998 Zongo killing may perhaps be the latest thorn in the flesh of the Burkinabe authorities, the 1987 Sankara killing continues to haunt the regime of President Blaise Compaore, who took over after the young leader's death. … On Sankara's brutal demise, a 1987 initiative undertaken by Italy's Radical Party co-president, Marco Panella, aimed at bringing to justice those responsible for Sankara's killing, never saw the light of day. Hamuli Rety, lawyer as well as president of a Congolese Political Movement, known as CRID, was among two other French advocates, Irene Terrel & Jean Jacques de Felice, who were chosen by Panella to identify judicial aspects necessary to pursue that type of crime (like Sankara's killing) to its conclusion, in conjunction with the Burkinabe authorities.

"At the time, intl tribunals to judge crimes against humanity such as the ones we know of today in Arusha & Yugoslavia, had not yet been set up. There was therefore a need to find a competent authority working in conjunction with the Burkinabe authorities, to investigate and bring to justice Sankara's killers," Rety told PANA. He said prior to Sankara's death, the Italian parliament had adopted a motion, on the initiative of Panella's Radical Party, in which Sankara's government would sign an interdependence treaty between Burkina Faso & Italy. However, after the bloody coup, further action after the motion was passed, were blocked. Panella insisted that the objectives of the treaty could not be realised until "those responsible for Sankara's assassination were brought to justice."
12.16.87 issue of leading Francophonie magazine, Jeune Afrique, quoted Panella stating that "those who seize power by killing should not estimate that they are morally, politically and juridical authorised to continue killing in order to maintain themselves in power. It is because of that that they must be judged and condemned." "It's regrettable that Panella's positive initiative to bring Sankara's killers to justice was not pursued to its conclusion," Rety said. "However, it's encouraging to note that the Burkinabe people themselves have taken the initiative to ensure Sankara goes down in history as a national hero as well as steps to erect a monument in his honour," he added

    Common water problems discussed
    3.27.98   PANAFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (PANA)
B.Faso delegation met with Ghana Pres. Rawlings in Accra on 27 March to discuss the usage of the waters of the Volta River, which flows through both countries. Burkina delegation, led by Foreign Minister Ablaise Ouedraogo, suggested creation of a joint commission to oversee Volga water use. Meeting was prompted by energy crisis in region caused by recent low rainfall. Last year, Burkino received only 40% of usual rainfall, and was described as being in "serious trouble" by Ouedraogo. In an effort to limit effects of low rainfalls, Burkina built 2 hydroelectric dams on Volta tributary, and plans 3 more, one of which would ensure water supplies to the capital Ouagadougou. However, Ghana recently complained the existing dams are seriously impacting water levels in its own Akosombo hydroelectric project, and now wants the 2 countries to act jointly to regulate to prevent this. Burkina delegation claimed holdings of two existing dams on the Volga in Burkina held only 0.9% of the capacity of the Akosombo Dam, and that the planned five dams would hold no more than 3.75% in total.
    House
    reading
Thomas Sankara, Samantha Anderson (
ed.) Thos. Sankara Speaks "The Burkina Faso Revolution, 1983- 87"
Ben Obinwa Nnaji auth., Blaise Compaore, architect of Burkina Faso revolution
Jean R. Guion auth., Blaise Compaore, realism and integrity "portrait of the man behind rectification in Burkina Faso"
Ludo Martens auth., Sankara, Compaorâe et la râevolution burkinabáe

various

    Censorship Index ¹
Last week of Nov. series of demonstrations marked the first anniversary of brutal murder of former editor in chief of the weekly l'Independantt, Norbert Zongo, & 3 friends (Index 2/1999, 5/1999, 6/1999). Prior to his death he investigated death in custody of David Ouedraogo, employee of president's brother. General strike planned for 12.13 to commemorate their deaths. (RSF)

On 12.1 Paulin Yameogo, director of opposition-linked weekly San Finna, was arrested and taken to National Security HQ in Ouagadougou. He is accused of publishing photograph of Ilboudo Hamidou, bearing marks of torture, after his arrest by presidential guard soldiers 12.97 Hamidou was detained at same time as David Ouedraogo, chauffeur of President Blaise Compaoré's brother, who was tortured to death 1.98 (RSF)

On the same day Boureima Sigue, dir. private daily Le Pays, was arrested & released some hours later, following publication of opposition text calling for guarantees to 'the security of all protesters' and an end to 'the terrorist methods used by the minority who cling to power'. (RSF)



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