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World / Americas

Burkina votes for new president after year of upheaval

Published: 29 Nov 2015 - 08:32 am | Last Updated: 05 Nov 2021 - 06:53 am
Peninsula

People ride motorcycles past a billboard for presidential candidate Benewende Sankara in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, November 28, 2015, ahead of the election. The billboard reads, "Vote Benewende Sankara, the insurgents' candidate." REUTERS

 

Ouagadougou: Burkina Faso elects a new president and parliament Sunday hoping to turn the page on a year of turmoil during which the west African nation's people ousted a veteran ruler and repelled a military coup.

Security will be tight as some five million voters in the nation of 20 million go to the polls to choose a new leader for the first time in almost three decades. 

The authorities are deploying between 20,000 and 25,000 troops to ward off the threat of a jihadist attack, following two recent assaults against police barracks on the country's long western border with troubled Mali.

"For the first time in 50 years there is an electoral uncertainty... we don't know the winner in advance," said Abdoulaye Soma, the head of the Burkinabe society of constitutional law.

"This is a positive point and a fundamental change from the other elections that we had seen earlier."

Former president Blaise Compaore was forced to flee the country following mass street protests in October 2014 against his bid to change the constitution to extend his 27-year rule.

A transitional government was put in place until fresh elections could be held. 

But the country was plunged into fresh uncertainty in September this year, weeks before a planned October 11 presidential vote, when elite army leaders close to Compaore tried to seize power.

Once again angry citizens took to the streets, foiling the military coup. Its leaders were thrown behind bars and the presidential and general elections were re-scheduled for November 29.

Compaore, 64, a handsome former army officer known as "Beau Blaise", is now exiled in neighbouring Ivory Coast.

He himself took power in 1987 when revolutionary former comrade-in-arms Thomas Sankara -- a charismatic African leader who came to be known as "Che Sankara" -- was gunned down in a coup Compaore is now widely believed to have orchestrated.

Sankara put the accent on schools and health and women's rights in a country that is poor even by African standards.

AFP