Europe 1 with AFP 11:02 a.m., October 2, 2022, modified at 11:02 a.m., October 2, 2022

Tear gas was fired outside the French embassy in Ouagadougou to disperse protesters supporting the self-proclaimed coup leader Ibrahim Traoré.

Two French institutions had been targeted by demonstrators late Saturday afternoon.

Tear gas canisters were fired from inside the French Embassy in Ouagadougou on Sunday to disperse protesters supporting self-proclaimed coup leader Ibrahim Traore.

A few dozen demonstrators had gathered in front of the embassy, ​​setting fire to protective barriers and throwing stones inside the building, on the roof of which French soldiers were positioned, when the gas was fired.

Other protesters were also seen tearing down barbed wire in an attempt to scale the perimeter wall of the diplomatic building.

Two fires already declared on Saturday

Late Saturday afternoon, two French institutions had been targeted by demonstrators: a fire had already broken out in front of the French embassy in Ouagadougou and another in front of the French Institute in Bobo-Dioulasso.

In Paris, the Quai d'Orsay had condemned "the violence against our embassy in the strongest terms", adding that "the safety of (his) compatriots" was his "priority".

These attacks "are the act of hostile demonstrators, manipulated by a campaign of disinformation against us", declared its spokeswoman Anne-Claire Legendre, while "calling on the stakeholders to ensure the security" of the diplomatic buildings.

The tension has persisted since Friday

Sunday, demonstrators also gathered near the headquarters of the national television of Burkina Faso around which the armored device in place since Friday, was lightened, with three vehicles, instead of twenty.

Rallies took place during the night from Saturday to Sunday on several major axes of the Burkinabe capital, flown over all night by a military helicopter.

Since the announcement Friday evening by soldiers led by Captain Ibrahim Traoré of the dismissal of the head of Burkina's military junta, Lieutenant-Colonel Paul Henri Damiba - himself who came to power by a coup in January -, tension persists in Ouagadougou.

On Saturday, Colonel Damiba made it clear that he did not intend to abdicate, calling on the new putschists "to come to their senses to avoid a fratricidal war which Burkina Faso does not need in this context".

Colonel Damiba came to power in January in a coup that toppled President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré, discredited by the rise in jihadist violence.

But in recent months, attacks hitting dozens of civilians and soldiers have multiplied in the north and east of Burkina Faso, where cities are now subject to a blockade by jihadists.