Recently in Understanding Africa Category

Nouveau chef d'etat major au Burkina... parle sur RFI

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Général Honoré Traoré
(00:44)

Chef d'état-major des armées

Spot the contradiction, French version

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From the French wikipedia... on Laurent Gbagbo's wife....

Simone Ehivet est la fille de Jean Ehivet, gendarme de son état et de Marie Djaha. Issue d'une famille de dix-huit enfants elle a quinze sœurs. C'est une historienne, docteur 3e cycle en littérature orale, chercheur en linguistique appliquée et syndicaliste marxiste très proche des milieux évangéliques américains.

Excellent opinion piece from Le Reporter, Burkina Faso

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Dans quelle république sommes-nous ? La question mérite d'être posée au regard des évènements survenus au Burkina depuis fin février 2011. Pendant que le pays traverse une crise sociopolitique suite à la mort suspecte de l'élève Justin Zongo à Koudougou, une poussée de fièvre kaki vient confirmer que le pays a mal à sa gouvernance. Une fois de plus, le gouvernement s'est embourbé dans ses propres contradictions. Confirmant ainsi sa conception d'une justice à deux vitesses: l'une pour les faibles et l'autre pour les forts. Quel crédit peut-on accorder à un gouvernement qui prône la justice pour les uns tout en accédant à des revendications d'impunité pour les autres ? Pendant que les élèves et  étudiants sont méchamment punis pour avoir manifesté et revendiqué justice pour leurs camarades, des militaires revendiquent l'impunité pour leurs frères d'armes condamnés par la justice. Et de quelle manière ! Le hic, c'est que le gouvernement a accédé, avec célérité, à cette revendication anticonstitutionnelle. La preuve est désormais établie: le pays n'est pas gouverné; le pouvoir en place a atteint ses limites. Du même coup, il nous livre à la merci des militaires qui ont désormais le droit de se rendre justice eux-mêmes. Armes au poing !

By Boureima OUEDRAOGO.  The rest is here.

Interview a la RFI sur Burkina Faso

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Luc Ibri Ga
(00:57)

président du Forum des citoyens de l'alternance

Civil unrest in Burkina Faso

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The last several weeks have seen significant unrest in Burkina Faso.  Students started demonstrating in February, after a secondary school student, Justin Zongo, was arrested in Koudougou and died while in detention.  His arrest was, apparently, a very banal affair involving a female classmate who happened to be the girlfriend of a police officer; so many suspected police brutality.  Civil society in Burkina Faso has been fighting a long fight against impunity, and the Justin Zongo affair touched a raw nerve (perhaps because his family name is the same as celebrated journalist Norbert Zongo, murdered by the military and Compaoré regime in 1998).  Secondary students all over the country went on targeted rampages, against police stations and government offices. 

The demonstrations and rioting were very political.  The regime, to its credit, did not respond with very much force.  But that "civil" response, however, seems to have spurred other, more unruly elements to see weakness.  Military garrisons around the country started rioting themselves, again in a fairly political way, targeting residences of government officials and government buildings.  Finally, on Friday, the elite presidential guard went on a rampage, this time carrying out a fair amount of looting.  The merchants of Ouagadougou, fed up, themselves rioted today and destroyed several government buildings. 

President Blaise Compaoré has sacked the chief of army staff and the government (Burkina Faso has a ministerial government that serves at the pleasure of the President and the ruling party).  President Compaoré, who has ruled since 1983 (at first as co-ruler with Thomas Sankara, who was killed in 1987) faces a serious challenge to his regime.  The outcome is now down to the micro-politics of Burkinabe society, and the highly unpredictable outcome of interactions among the 2,000-3,000 officers of the armed forces.  Civil society, however, is far stronger than in was in 1987.  As in Europe in the 1700s, a growing bourgeoisie is ready to tell those with weapons that if they want to continue to rule, they have to make concessions.

Transparency and accountability are seen now, vividly, to be more than buzzwords.  Without them, 20 years of moderate economic progress, increases in schooling, refinement of institutions for enabling investment.... all will vanish overnight, lives may be lost, infrastructure destroyed.  Five of Burkina Faso's West African neighbors have gone through this awful decline: Cote d'Ivoire, Liberia, Guinea, Niger and Sierra Leone.

I am hopeful that Burkina Faso will weather the crisis.  The country has several good institutions: a very stable traditional ruling class, in the form of the Mossi kingdoms; a tradtion of ethnic and religious tolerance that seems impermeable to animosities that can be stoked by spoiler politicians; a sense that the political elite understands the lessons of the five neighbors, and won't risk chaos; a lively free press that is keeping the citizenry pretty well-informed; a small but active segment of the judiciary that tries its best to act as counterweight to the regime; a large class of professional former government officials- President Compaoré liked to cycle through government every five years or so, so there is a lot of "dispersed expertise."

I will be watching events unfold.  For now FAVL staff and volunteers in Burkina Faso are all safe and do not appear to be significantly affected by the unrest.  Villages are usually the safest place to be in troubling times.

C'est fini?!

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Abidjan - Charles Blé Goudé serait réfugié à l'ONUCI

Au portes d'Abidjan

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French message of the day

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Supposedly attributed to the respected Burkinabè historian Joseph Ki-Zerbo: "Quand on ne sait pas où on va, on n'arrive nulle part."

Rene Bagoro, judge in Burkina Faso, interviewed... nice!

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Slow economic growth in Burkina Faso

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The economies of West Africa are quite stagnant.  Tertius Zongo, the Prime Minister of Burkina Faso, in his just released address to the nation, noted that per capita growth in Burkina Faso has averaged only 2% per year for the period 2005-10.  But given the phenomenal increase in the mining sector, first from investment of more than $1b (about 10% of GDP) and then extraction and exports of gold (now about 5% of GDP), the per capita GDP growth for nationals is certainly less than 1%.  The reason is that the mining sector is heavily titled towards foreign firms, who retain perhaps 60% of the value.  The situation is similar for the other rapidly growing industry, telcom services.  These sectors produce highly skewed (and tilted towards non-nationals) income distribution.  Of course, remittance go some way to alleviate the skewed income growth of the domestic economy.  But the bottom line is the typical Burkinabè is basically stagnating at the lowest income levels in the world.

This context makes is difficult for FAVL to realize one of its objectives, which is gradual "turning over" of responsibility of managing libraries to local mayors, and concentrating on program support services for the libraries.  The mayors just aren't seeing increases in their budgets and capacities.  So our commitment is to ensure continued operations of the eleven libraries now operating in Burkina Faso.  We hope you will continue to contribute!

FAVL Blog

Books, reading, and libraries relevant to Africa by Michael Kevane, co-Director of FAVL and economist at Santa Clara University.

Other contributors include Kate Parry, FAVL-East Africa director, Peace Corps volunteer Emilie Crofton, Krystle Austin, Elisee Sare, and Monique Nadembega.

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