The Burkinabè police dispersed, Saturday, November 27, using tear gas, several hundred people who wanted to demonstrate in Ouagadougou against the power, during a rally banned by the town hall, noted an AFP journalist.

The riot police fired tear gas to prevent demonstrators from gathering at Place de la Nation, in the center of the Burkinabè capital, crisscrossed by an important security device and where all businesses were closed.

"The march is prohibited, disperse, go home," said a policeman to the demonstrators before the dispersal.

The gathering of demonstrators, who wanted to denounce the "inability" of President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré to face the jihadist violence ravaging Burkina Faso, had been banned by the town hall of Ouagadougou.

"I invite you to take all the measures that you deem useful so that no illegal demonstration can take place on the municipal territory" of Ouagadougou, asked the mayor Armand Beouindé, in a note addressed to the commanders of the gendarmerie, of the national and municipal police.

A deleterious security situation 

One of the demonstrators, Fabrice Sawadogo, a young man of 28, affirmed that "after seven years of incapacity in the face of the terrorist attacks which mourn us every day, it is time to demand the departure of the regime".

"We don't have to negotiate with an incompetent government that has to admit that it has failed," he said.

The November 27 Coalition, bringing together three civil society organizations, called on "all Burkinabè to go out en masse" on Saturday "in a peaceful atmosphere, to denounce the growing insecurity and demand the departure of the Head of State" , Roch Marc Christian Kaboré.

Qualifying as "very chaotic" the situation in Burkina Faso "marked by a tattered security", the spokesperson of the coalition, Moussa Konaté, announced that in addition to Ouagadougou, demonstrations were also planned in Bobo Dioulasso, second city of the countries, and other major cities.

"We are in a context of insecurity that everyone denounces. We should not undertake marches for which we do not really see the platform of demands," retorted Benewende Sankara, Minister of Housing, denouncing, on behalf of the presidential majority, "untimely demonstrations".

Mobile internet cut

Other civil society movements have called for standing out from these demonstrations so as "not to be complicit with those who want to bring chaos to the country".

As anger grows in Burkina Faso, the government has "decided to extend the suspension of mobile internet for a period of 96 hours from Wednesday", throughout the national territory, after a previous interruption of four days for "security reasons".

Burkina Faso has been caught, since 2015, in a spiral of violence attributed to jihadist armed groups, affiliated with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group.

Attacks targeting civilians and soldiers are increasingly frequent and the vast majority concentrated in the north and east of the country.

The attack on 14 November on a gendarmerie detachment in Inata (north) - one of the deadliest against the security forces for six years - deeply shocked the Burkinabè: at least 57 people, including 53 gendarmes, were killed by armed jihadists.

"We must put an end to the unacceptable dysfunctions which undermine the morale of our fighting troops and hamper their effectiveness in the fight against armed terrorist groups", declared Thursday evening President Kaboré, words often repeated which no longer convince in Burkina Faso. Faso, where attacks are taking place more and more regularly.

Sometimes mixed with intercommunal clashes, jihadist violence has killed around 2,000 people over the past six years and forced 1.4 million people to flee their homes.

With AFP

The summary of the week

France 24 invites you to come back to the news that marked the week

I subscribe

Take international news everywhere with you!

Download the France 24 application

google-play-badge_FR