Burkina Faso army maintains hold on power as Zida named PM
Burkina interim President Michel Kafando (left) walks with Lieutenant Colonel Isaac Zida on November 19, 2014 at the presidential palace in Ouagadougou. Zida, who took power after the fall of Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaore, was named prime minister.
OUAGADOUGOU
The army officer
who took power after the fall of Burkina Faso’s president was on
Wednesday named prime minister, ensuring the military keeps a grip on
government despite pressure for a civilian transition.
Lieutenant
Colonel Isaac Zida was appointed premier by the country’s interim
president three weeks after longtime leader Blaise Compaore fled the
country under pressure from mass protests.
While
interim president Michel Kafando, a former foreign minister, is a
civilian, Zida’s appointment as head of his government showed the
military had no immediate plans to retreat from a role in running the
west African nation.
In the immediate aftermath of
Compaore’s fall, Zida, then second-in-command of the presidential guard,
was installed in what appeared to be a military power grab.
The country faced international pressure to quickly transition to civilian rule.
Zida
on Wednesday urged the people of Burkina Faso and the international
community “to accompany us without prejudice” on the path to a peaceful
transition, insisting the government would make no “selfish
calculations”.
The appointment of the 49-year-old was agreed between politicians and army leaders, according to a senior military officer.
“It was on this understanding that we gave the post of president... to civilians,” the officer said. (AFP)
SABOTAGE
Some
civil society representatives said they were concerned over Zida’s
appointment, but were willing to be patient and monitor his performance.
“We
are worried, but that’s all,” said Guy Herve Kam, spokesman for the
Balai Citoyen (Citizen Broom) group, whose mobilisation of young
protesters contributed to Compaore’s fall.
A number of
residents of the capital Ouagadougou however were sharply critical,
calling the appointment a betrayal of their “revolution”.
Zida’s
moves while in power have included suspending local and regional
councils and sacking two heads of state firms for alleged sabotage.
Kafando,
a 72-year-old veteran diplomat, was sworn in as Burkina Faso’s interim
president on Tuesday to oversee a year-long transition to civilian rule
after the turbulent ouster of Compaore’s regime on October 31.
The one-time foreign minister and UN ambassador has pledged he would not let the landlocked nation of 17 million people become a “banana republic”.
The one-time foreign minister and UN ambassador has pledged he would not let the landlocked nation of 17 million people become a “banana republic”.
Poised
to formally take over Friday from the interim military regime, Kafando
emphasised his “humility” as a leader aware that he temporarily held
“power that belongs to the people”.
Mass unrest erupted
in late October over Compaore’s bid to change the constitution, which
would have allowed him to extend his 27-year rule of the former French
colony.
Kafando was chosen to head the transition after
tortuous negotiations between the military, political parties and civil
society groups.
Both Kafando and Zida are barred from
standing in elections scheduled to be held in November next year under
the transition deal.
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