Tag Archives: Thomas Sankara

Thomas Sankara’s mausoleum opens to honor revolutionary leader

Pritzker Prize-winning architect Francis Kéré designed the memorial in Ouagadougou in tribute to Thomas Sankara, Burkina Faso’s revolutionary leader.

The recently opened mausoleum of the father of Burkina Faso’s 1983 Revolution and his 12 aides, assassinated the same year, proudly stands on the site of the Conseil de l’Entente. The mausoleum is over 70 meters high, it’s designed in the shape of an eye, with descending steps representing the 13 fallen martyrs. The site is a bold tribute to the revolution’s triumph over imperialism.

 “This mausoleum represents the revolution’s victory over reactionary forces, the triumph of Thomas Sankara’s ideology that was sovereignty-driven over imperialism’s enslaving ambitions. It’s a victory for oppressed peoples against their oppressors. A triumph of the colonized over the colonizers.” Serge Bayala Imotep, Civil Society Activist, said.

Built with bricks made of laterite blocks, the memorial is environmentally friendly, representing some of Sankara’s own vision: championing the use of local resources for Burkina Faso’s sustainable development. The country’s Prime Minister said it’s more than a building but also a space for collective awakening.

 “This is a site for the collective consciousness of Burkinabè, of freedom fighters, and of all those who cherish peace and social justice, and of  the sacrifice made by President Thomas Sankara and his aides. This mausoleum also bears witness to a persecuted but enduring integrity.” Jean Emmanuel Ouédraogo, Prime Minister of Burkina Faso, said.

The site also includes a restaurant, media library, workshops and offices, all linked by a leafy promenade. The space aims to educate, bring people together and provide a contemplative environment to reflect on Sankara’s principles of justice and social equity.

Source: Africanews

Africa’s youngest leader divides opinion over Russia ties

As news emerged this week about hundreds of Burkina Faso citizens killed separately by both jihadi groups and government forces, images of Burkina Faso’s junta leader Capt. Ibrahim Traore were plastered over Russian state media speaking about pan-Africanism and liberating the minds of the continent’s youths.

Traore, who was in Moscow for the 80th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II, is Africa’s youngest leader at 37, a strong appeal for the continent’s young population that is used to much older leaders.

Since coming to power in September 2022 after the country’s second coup that year, he has dwelt on a rhetoric of self-reliance and independence from the West, particularly former colonial ruler France — a message that often resonates with young Africans and the diaspora.

Why is Traore trending

The latest Traore frenzy reached a new peak late April with a solidarity march in the country’s capital, Ouagadougou, following an alleged coup attempt and comments by Gen. Michael Langley, the head of U.S. military in Africa, accusing the Burkina Faso leader of misusing the country’s gold reserves.

Following the 2022 coup that brought him to power, Traore promised to end the country’s decadeslong deadly security crisis and leverage its rich mineral resources for the benefit of its 24 million citizens.

Alongside the coup-hit nations of Niger and Mali, Burkina Faso has since severed ties with the regional bloc of ECOWAS — criticized by many young Africans as representing the interest of leaders and not the citizens — as well as longstanding Western allies such as France, whose military provided security support to the government for many years to help its security crisis.

Analysts and locals suggest that these factors, combined with his youth, have contributed to Traore’s appeal among young Africans.

“There is a growing consciousness among African youth at home and abroad that they need to do something about the continent’s lack of progress,” said Richard Alandu, a Ghanaian living near the border with Burkina Faso. “It appears Traore has become the face of that consciousness.”

How has Traore fared as Burkina Faso’s junta leader

The security crisis that Traore vowed to resolve has worsened instead, slowing the country’s overall economic development and preventing most citizens from benefiting from its mineral wealth, according to analysts and researchers’ data.

“There has been no real progress on the ground” in Burkina Faso, said Gbara Awanen, a professor of international relations and security studies at Nigeria’s Baze University, who specializes in West Africa. “A lot of it is just sleek propaganda.”

Data from the U.S.-based Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, or ACLED, shows that while 2,894 people were killed by both government and armed groups during the year before the 2022 coup, the number has more than doubled to at least 7,200 in the last year.

Analysts say the attacks have worsened to the point that Ouagadougou is now increasingly threatened, with more than 60% of the country outside of government control. At least 2.1 million people have lost their homes as a result of the violence, and almost 6.5 million need humanitarian aid to survive, conservative estimates show.

Propaganda rhythms

Babacar Ndiaye, a senior fellow at the Senegal-based Timbuktu Institute for Peace Studies, attributes the current frenzy surrounding Traore primarily to his popularity — and Russia-driven propaganda

Despite Burkina Faso’s worsening security crisis, Traore still has “so much resonance and interest simply because of propaganda,” Ndiaye said. “In Africa, there is deep frustration with the traditional leadership, so there is polarized anger towards a scapegoat that is the west.”

West Africa, meanwhile, has a history of young men seizing power as exemplified by John Jerry Rawlings in Ghana, Samuel Doe in Liberia and Thomas Sankara in Burkina Faso, all in the 1980s. That history, placed against the perceived failure of Western-style democracy in Africa, has helped to create conditions for idolizing the likes of Traore.

Still, allegations of propaganda do not adequately explain the excitement that has built up around Africa’s youngest ruler, according to Chidi Odinkalu, an Africa analyst and professor at Tufts University.

“Traore articulates a revolutionary message that is appealing to a young population frustrated by the thievery of what passes for ‘democracy’ in their own countries,” said Odinkalu.

Source: Africanews

COMMEMORATION OF 36TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE BRUTAL ASSASSINATION OF THE 20th CENTURY PAN-AFRICAN REVOLUTIONARY LEADER OF BURKINA FASO-THOMAS SANKARA

This statement comes from a group of forward-looking Africans from across the continent and the diaspora, who now constitute themselves as the ‘SAHEL SOLIDARITY CAMPAIGN NETWORK’. Today is 15th October, 2023 and we join the voices of African peoples everywhere in the global village to commemorate the 36th anniversary of the barbaric assassination of the 20th century Pan-African revolutionary Leader of Burkina Faso, Captain Thomas Isidore Noeel Sankara.

Thirty-six years ago in 1987, Africans on the continent and abroad were shocked when the barbaric assassination of Captain Thomas Sankara was announced. The news was received with outrage, grief and anger. Sankara was killed by those who wanted to turn Africa as trust territory, at the mercy and pity of poor African masses.

Much as the we, Africans condemn terrorism in all its ramification, the barbaric assassination of Captain Thomas Sankara was a heinous crime and crime against humanity. It was a terrorist act and murder of Pan-Africanism and dignity of Africans. A tragedy wrought by combination of greed, thievery, looting of natural resources and imperialism. It was not mere assassination of one person but the murder of peace, dignity and political culture in Africa.

Thomas Sankara was a great African Revolutionary Leader who looked to the future and made great achievements in various fields for the future of his country and Africa in general. Such a heinous act should never be tolerated anywhere in Africa, as we say enough is enough with the assassination of our leaders on the continent. Sankara is physically not with us but left behind for us a great legacy to preserve.

Sankara’s legacy is one of global impact and a profound and positive image for Africa and the African diasporas. We lost a great leader who loved Africa and black people.

As we remember the barbaric of Captain Thomas Sankara today, 36 years after the terror act on the African continent, we would like to announce the formation of the New African platform, named, called and addressed as the SAHEL SOLIDARITY CAMPAIGN NETWORK and which uses the acronym (SaS-CaN). SaS-CaN espouses a pro African agenda, and advocates peace, progress and prosperity in the Sahel region and stands in solidarity with Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger. Besides, we seek to support the SAHEL region to advance the material, economic, social, the environment and wellbeing of the people of the SAHEL. The vision, mission, underlying values and principles of SaS-CaN will be published soon.

Solidarity with Burkina Faso!

Solidarity with Africa and Africans.

Sender: (Chief) Alimamy Bakarr Sankoh President of SaS-CaN

Burkina Faso: Compaore sentenced to life for Sankara assassination

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A military tribunal in Burkina Faso has sentenced to life in prison former President Blaise Compaore for his role in the murder of former leader Thomas Sankara.

The pan-African leader was assassinated over three decades but it is only now that a trial is taking place to reveal the facts.

Compaore was tried and sentenced though in absentia by a military tribunal on Wednesday. He is in exile abroad.

Compaore was sentenced along with his then-security chief, Hyacinthe Kafando, who also received a life term.

The tribunal said it found the men “guilty of attack on state security, complicity in murder and concealment of a corpse.”

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Sankara’s widow Mariam Sankara who was present for the sentencing told the media she was “satisfied” with the verdict, but “wished” Compaore and Kafando were present.

“It is not good that people kill other people and stop the process of development of a country without being punished,” she told reporters.

Last year when the trial started a former soldier admitted his role in events leading to the death of Thomas Sankara.

Yamba Elise Ilboudo, 62 who was on trial, charged with complicity in endangering state security told the tribunal that he helped transport a hit squad to assassinate Thomas Sankara.

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In his testimony to the court, the 62-year-old former soldier said on the day of the October 15 1987 coup, he was “at Blaise Compaore‘s home” with other men.

“We were under the orders of Hyacinthe Kafando, as head of security,” Ilboudo said.

According to Ilboudo he was told by Kafando to drive to the meeting which Sankara was attending.

He testified that when they arrived, Kafando and another individual called Maiga, “who had been driving Blaise Compaore’s car, got out and opened fire.”

Kafando, according to the ex-soldiers testimony then ordered the men in the two cars to get out with some going “to the rear of the building where President Sankara was”.

Ilboudo said he remained in the car during the subsequent incidents and did not open fire.

Kafando became chief warrant officer in Compaore’s presidential guard after that coup.

He is alleged to have been in charge of the hit squad. Kafando is currently on the run.

Compaore who boycotted the trial has always denied allegations that he engineered the assassination.

Fourteen people were on trial for the 1987 assassination in which Thomas Sankara and 12 others were killed at a top government meeting.

Remembering Thomas Sankara

Source: Africafeeds.com

Source: Africa Feeds

Burkina Faso: Ex-soldier admits role in murder of Thomas Sankara

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A former soldier has admitted his role in events leading to the death of former leader of Burkina Faso Thomas Sankara, 34 years ago.

Yamba Elise Ilboudo, 62 is currently on trial, charged with complicity in endangering state security.

The ongoing trial at a military court in Ouagadougou is hoping to bring closure to the assassination of Sankara, considered a revolutionary leader of Burkina Faso.

Ilboudo on Tuesday said he helped transport a hit squad to assassinate Thomas Sankara.

In his testimony to the court, the 62-year-old former soldier said on the day of the October 15 1987 coup, he was “at Blaise Compaore‘s home” with other men.

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“We were under the orders of Hyacinthe Kafando, as head of security,” Ilboudo said.

Kafando became chief warrant officer in Compaore’s presidential guard after that coup.

He is alleged to have been in charge of the hit squad. Kafando is currently on the run.

Compaore who has boycotted the trial and always denied allegations that he engineered the assassination is also being tried in absentia.

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According to Ilboudo he was told by Kafando to drive to the meeting which Sankara was attending.

He testified that when they arrived, Kafando and another individual called Maiga, “who had been driving Blaise Compaore’s car, got out and opened fire.”

Kafando, according to the ex-soldiers testimony then ordered the men in the two cars to get out with some going “to the rear of the building where President Sankara was”.

Ilboudo said he remained in the car during the subsequent incidents and did not open fire.

He admitted to the charge of complicity in endangering state security but said his actions were unpremeditated since he had not taken part in any meeting to plan the assassination, nor had he taken part in the shooting.

Fourteen people are on trial for the 1987 assassination in which Thomas Sankara and 12 others were killed at a top government meeting.

The accused include Sankara’s friend and former comrade-in-arms, Blaise Compaore, who came to power after the bloodbath.

Compaore ruled for 27 years before being deposed by a popular uprising in 2014 and fleeing to neighbouring Ivory Coast.

Burkina Faso: Statue of Thomas Sankara unveiled

Source: Africafeeds.com

Source: Africa Feeds

Blaise Compaoré to boycott Thomas Sankara murder trial

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Burkina Faso’s former President, Blaise Compaoré who is now living in exile will not attend this month’s trial over the 1987 assassination of his predecessor, Thomas Sankara.

The trial is due to start on Monday. Compaoré’s lawyers have also signaled their intention to boycott the proceedings, describing it as “staged” and “political”.

Compaoré ousted Thomas Sankara in 1987 and has since been suspected of playing a role in the death of the former military leader.

Military prosecutors in Burkina Faso’s capital Ouagadougou said on Tuesday that the trial will be conducted in public.

A military tribunal indicted Compaoré in April this year for “attack on state security, complicity in murder and concealment of corpse”.

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The Thirteen other people charged along with the former president have not been placed in detention just yet.

Mr Compaoré though has been living in Ivory Coast since 2014 after he was ousted following mass protests.

A warrant for his arrest was issued in 2015 but he is currently in Ivory Coast, where he has taken citizenship.

Compaoré who has always denied playing a role in the assassination of Sankara may be tried in absentia.

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Thomas Sankara became military leader of Burkina Faso from 1983 to 1987. Known as a revolutionary leader, he was assassinated just four years into his leadership.

Sankara come into power through a coup in 1983 after serving as Prime Minister.

He once declared that “Kill Sankara and thousands of Sankaras shall be born.” His assassination happened a few months after this statement.

He was born on December 21, 1949, at Yako in the dusty north of then Upper Volta.  Sankara was 12 when his homeland attained independence from France.

He and twelve other officers were killed by a commando on 15 October 1987 following a coup.

That coup brought one of his allies, former president Blaise Compaoré to power. There are many who still believe Blaise Compaoré played a role in Sankara’s death.

Thomas Sankara murder trial to start in October

Source: Africafeeds.com

Source: Africa Feeds

Thomas Sankara murder trial to start in October

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Burkina Faso officials have announced that the trial of former Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaoré and 13 others accused of assassinating Thomas Sankara will start on 11 October.

Compaoré ousted Thomas Sankara in 1987 and has since been suspected of playing a role in the death of the former military leader.

Military prosecutors in Burkina Faso’s capital Ouagadougou said on Tuesday that the trial will be conducted in public.

A military tribunal indicted Compaoré in April this year for “attack on state security, complicity in murder and concealment of corpse”.

The Thirteen other people charged along with the former president have not been placed in detention just yet.

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Mr. Compaoré was forced into exile in 2014 after he attempted to change the law to extend his rule.

A warrant for his arrest was issued in 2015 but he is currently in Ivory Coast, where he has taken citizenship.

Compaoré who has always denied playing a role in the assassination of Sankara may be tried in absentia.

Thomas Sankara became military leader of Burkina Faso from 1983 to 1987. Known as a revolutionary leader, he was assassinated just four years into his leadership.

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Sankara come into power through a coup in 1983 after serving as Prime Minister.

He once declared that “Kill Sankara and thousands of Sankaras shall be born.” His assassination happened a few months after this statement.

He was born on December 21, 1949, at Yako in the dusty north of then Upper Volta.  Sankara was 12 when his homeland attained independence from France.

He and twelve other officers were killed by a commando on 15 October 1987 following a coup.

That coup brought one of his allies, former president Blaise Compaoré to power. There are many who still believe Blaise Compaoré played a role in Sankara’s death.

Source: Africafeeds.com

Source: Africa Feeds

Burkina Faso: Ex-leader Compaoré to stand trial for Sankara murder

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The former president of Burkina Faso, Blaise Compaoré is to face charges of murder of Thomas Sankara.

Compaoré ousted Thomas Sankara in 1987 and has since been suspected of playing a role in the death of the former military leader.

A military tribunal in Burkina Faso on Tuesday indicted the former president for “attack on state security, complicity in murder and concealment of corpse”.

Thirteen other people were among those charged along with the former president.

The warrants “to bring defendants not yet detained” were issued early Tuesday, one of the accused’s lawyer told reporters.

Forced into exile

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Mr. Compaoré was forced into exile in 2014 after he attempted to change the law to extend his rule.

A warrant for his arrest was issued in 2015 but he is currently in Ivory Coast, where he has taken citizenship.

Thomas Sankara became military leader of Burkina Faso from 1983 to 1987. Known as a revolutionary leader, he was assassinated just four years into his leadership.

Sankara come into power through a coup in 1983 after serving as Prime Minister.

– –

He once declared that “Kill Sankara and thousands of Sankaras shall be born.” His assassination happened a few months after this statement.

Faces Of Africa - Sankara's Ghost

He was born on December 21, 1949, at Yako in the dusty north of then Upper Volta.  Sankara was 12 when his homeland attained independence from France.

He and twelve other officers were killed by a commando on 15 October 1987 following a coup.

That coup brought one of his allies, former president Blaise Compaoré to power. There are many who still believe Blaise Compaoré played a role in Sankara’s death.

Sankara is a huge figure

Thomas Sankara was a hugely popular leader and has become a cult figure.

A huge statue of the late Sankara was unveiled in the capital, Ouagadougou in 2019 as part of the grand Sankara memorial monument.

The unveiling of the statue was witnessed by hundreds.

The country’s president, Roch Kabore was assisted by the late former Ghanaian president, Jerry John Rawlings to unveil the statue.

Saudi crown prince ‘approved’ Khashoggi murder, US report says

Source: Africafeeds.com

Source: Africa Feeds

Africa: Rising Above Foreign Aid

100117-N-6247V-083 PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (Jan. 17, 2010) Pallets of food, water and supplies sit on the flight line at the airport as a MH-53E helicopter from Helicopter Mine Countermeasures Squadron 14 awaits to be on loaded with supplies. Carl Vinson and Carrier Air Wing 17 are conducting humanitarian and disaster relief operations as part of Operation Unified Response after a 7.0 magnitude earthquake caused severe damage in Haiti Jan. 12. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Candice Villarreal/Released)
100117-N-6247V-083
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (Jan. 17, 2010) Pallets of food, water and supplies sit on the flight line at the airport as a MH-53E helicopter from Helicopter Mine Countermeasures Squadron 14 awaits to be on loaded with supplies. Carl Vinson and Carrier Air Wing 17 are conducting humanitarian and disaster relief operations as part of Operation Unified Response after a 7.0 magnitude earthquake caused severe damage in Haiti Jan. 12. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Candice Villarreal/Released)

KIGALI, RWANDA: This week, Africa’s Heads of State and Governments converge in the city of Kigali for the 27th African Union (AU) Summit.  This gathering of the 54 AU Member States, follows a similar meet in January, is extremely important as it opens up for discussions and decisions that affect our collective future.  Looking at the numerous interrelated challenges that we face as a continent, one can be sure that the Summit will seek to address matters concerning peace, security, youth, women, inclusive economic growth, health and governance. Continue reading Africa: Rising Above Foreign Aid