Goodluck Jonathan, Ghana’s
John Dramani Mahama and Macky Sall of Senegal were stunned on
Wednesday, 5 November, 2014 when opposition leaders and civil society
groups walked out of a meeting they brokered to bring back civilian rule
in Burkina Faso.
The presidents of three neighbouring west African nations had flown
into Ouagadougou to help broker peace between the opposition party and
supporters of deposed president Blaise Compaore.
“We haven’t even buried our dead yet and they are putting arrogant
people back in office who held the people in contempt,” declared Luc
Marius Ibriga, the spokesman for the civil society groups, as their
representatives left the room.
The presidents of Nigeria, Ghana and Senegal are trying to broker a
transition deal as Canada suspended its aid to the impoverished west
African nation and other nations considered after the military named an
interim leader to head the country.
It was gathered that security guards had to intervene as talks
between the opposition and the West African leaders broke down with
emotions high over the possible involvement of Compaore loyalists in any
new provisional government.
“We do not want to talk with the old governing party. They represent Blaise Compaore,” said Rose-Marie Compaore, parliamentary leader of the main opposition group, the Union for Progress and Change.
Both groups were later persuaded to return to the negotiations only
for a new stand-off as members of the former ruling party in turn
refused to sit down with them.
The opposition’s main leader Zephirin Diabre meanwhile objected to
the west African leaders’ request for each group to submit three
possible candidates for a transition government.
It is a “question of sovereignty,” said Diabre.
The negotiations had come on the eve of an emergency meeting in Accra
of west African leaders, when Burkina Faso’s political crisis is to be
discussed.
The army stepped in to fill the power vacuum left by Compaore, who
was deposed by a violent popular uprising on Friday that some had
likened to the Arab Spring after 27 years in power.
Lieutenant-Colonel Isaac Zida, the interim leader appointed by Burkina Faso’s military,
told unions on Tuesday that he would return the country to civilian
rule within two weeks, a day after the African Union threatened
sanctions if the army failed to relinquish power within that timeframe.
President
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