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Burkina Faso |
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Burkina FasoLandlocked country in west Africa, bounded east by Niger, northwest and west by Mali, and south by Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, and Benin. GovernmentThe 1991 constitution provides for a 111-member national assembly, Assemblée des Députés Populaires (ADP), elected by universal suffrage for a five-year term, and a president, similarly elected for five years, renewable only once. The president appoints a prime minister and a council of ministers.HistoryThe area known from 1984 as Burkina Faso was invaded in the 11th-13th centuries by the Mossi people, whose powerful warrior kingdoms lasted for over 500 years. In the 1890s it became a province of French West Africa, and in 1919 a separate colony, known as Upper Volta. In 1958 it became a self-governing republic and in 1960 achieved full independence with Maurice Yaméogo as president.Military ruleIn 1966 Col Sangoulé Lamizana seized power as president and prime minister in a military coup. He suspended the constitution, dissolved the national assembly, banned political activity, and set up a supreme council of the armed forces as the instrument of government. In 1969 the ban on political activity was lifted, and in 1970 a referendum approved a new constitution, based on civilian rule, but in 1974 Lamizana dissolved the national assembly and returned to military rule.Lamizana overthrownIn 1977 a referendum approved a return to civilian government and the Volta Democratic Union (UDV) won a majority in the 1978 national assembly elections, and Lamizana became president. But a deteriorating economy led to strikes, and in 1980 Col Zerbo overthrew Lamizana in a bloodless coup and formed a government of national recovery.Country renamed Burkina FasoIn 1982 Zerbo was ousted, and Maj Jean-Baptiste Ouedraogo emerged as leader of a military regime, with Capt Thomas Sankara as prime minister. In 1983 Sankara seized power in another coup, becoming president and ruling through a council of ministers. Opposition members were arrested, the national assembly was dissolved, and a National Revolutionary Council (CNR) set up. In 1984 Sankara renamed the country Burkina Faso (‘land of upright men’), symbolizing a break with its colonial past; his government strengthened ties with Ghana and established links with Benin and Libya.Compaoré dominantSankara was killed in October 1987 in a military coup led by a former close colleague, Capt Blaise Compaoré. Throughout 1991 Compaoré resisted calls for an all-party national conference, but a new constitution was approved. He was re-elected president in 1992, but there were a large number of abstentions because the opposition boycotted the poll. The ruling Popular Front coalition won a clear majority in multiparty assembly elections in 2003, amid claims of electoral fraud. The opposition remained divided and Compaoré was re-elected president in 1998 and 2005 and his Congress for Democracy and Progress party won majorities in what were substantially free and fair assembly elections in 1997 and 2002. |
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