Burkina army vows unity govt as protesters shun power grab
BY Agencies4 Nov 2014 5:59 AM IST
Agencies4 Nov 2014 5:59 AM IST
Burkina Faso’s military vowed to install a unity government after tightening its control over the west African nation on Sunday, firing tear gas and shots in the air to disperse protesters denouncing an army power grab.
Troops moved into Place de la Nation in the capital Ouagadougou and took over the national television headquarters in a show of force, despite calls by the international community and protesters for a return to civilian rule.
As international mediators brandished the threat of sanctions if the army refused to back down and allow a civilian transfer of power, the military pledged to put in place a transition government formed by ‘broad consensus’. The military had stepped into the power vacuum left by president Blaise Compaore, who was forced to resign in the wake of violent street demonstrations over his 27-year-rule of the impoverished country that some have likened to the Arab Spring.But the army said that it was acting only with the interest of the nation at heart and that ‘power does not interest us’.
‘What is currently at stake is more than self interest,’ it said in a statement issued after Isaac Zida -- the man it named as interim chief -- met with opposition leaders.
International observers watching in alarm urged the army to return power to the civilians, with UN envoy for west Africa, Mohamed Ibn Chambas, saying that he and African leaders had pressed the demand in a meeting with the country’s top military brass.
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