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Insurrection populaire au Burkina Faso : le peuple éduque les (...) - leFaso.... - 0 views

  • Thus will they do useful work by not bringing bad governance of the ousted regime to parasitize the popular uprising
  • But the people did better than the Schumpeterian innovator, which breaks with the routine, by questioning private property for at least two days.
  • Economic calculation should be made with caution as there were, there are and is calculated to serve a cause. The calculation of economists only considered the destruction of property of regime officials and those of their allies. What about the people assets? Quid unproductive expenditure to repress the people?
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  • Faced with this carelessness the people must mobilize to demand an end to searches in private homes, require the CDP that sheds its rot and vermin before joining the ranks of the people; it is a public health requirement which alone can enable the party to reform to help advance the process of rebirth of the Burkinabe society.
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Thomas Sankara and the new Africa renaissance | Pambazuka News - 0 views

  • Sankara was the first apostle of the African Renaissance, taken over and perfected by former President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa.
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Burkina Faso's Troubled Legacy of Dictatorship | Crisis Group - 0 views

  • Marginalising a part of the political class can only lead to strategies of contestation and destabilisation, as Crisis Group reported in June. The former majority does not enjoy much popular support, especially in the cities, but retains significant loyalties within the RSP.
  • The investigation into the murder of late President Thomas Sankara is also fuelling this explosive mix. Some senior RSP officers are believed to have been involved in Sankara’s killing in 1987, and a few RSP officers have reportedly been indicted in recent weeks in relation to the investigation. Coincidentally, the results of the autopsy and ballistic examination that were carried out following the exhumation of Sankara’s grave were due to be communicated to the lawyers on Thursday, the day after the coup.
  • The RSP and the former majority will not accept elections in which some of their candidates are excluded, and civil society and political parties will not accept to re-include them in the elections. A way out of the crisis seems far off.
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  • There are reports that some military officers are helping protesters to mobilise to force the RSP to backpedal. In Bobo-Dioulasso for example, the country’s second largest city, the curfew instituted by the coup organisers is not respected and the military officers have reportedly stayed in the barracks – for now at least. Fighting between military factions would bring the crisis to a much higher level of gravity.
  • This new instability is a major setback for Burkina Faso and the region. If the elections had taken place smoothly, this would have been a huge step forward for the country and this could have set a precedent for other countries.
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Pambazuka - The long road to freedom for women in Burkina Faso - 0 views

  • Manifesting not just as physical or sexual violence (strikes, rape, abuse, sexual exploitation, etc.), violence against women can also take the form of psychological or moral violence (insults, threats, defamation, etc.), economic violence (denial of access to monetary resources, income, land, etc.), and social violence (female genital mutilation, early and/or forced-marriage, repudiation for reasons including accusations of witchcraft, compulsory levirate marriages, etc.), amongst others.
  • Furthermore, such acts are compounded by the local cultural practices and norms, which are contextually characterised by strong traditions, customs, and patriarchial interpretations of religion.
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Pambazuka - Cottoning on to a lie - 0 views

  • Scrutiny of actual experiences reveals a tragic tale of crippling debt, appalling market prices and a technology prone to failure in the absence of very specific and onerous management techniques, which are not suited to smallholder production. As stated by a farmer during a Malian public consultation on GMOs, "What's the point of encouraging us to increase yields with GMOs when we can't get a decent price for what we already produce?"
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