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BURKINA FASO
2002 was a particularly tough year for President
Blaise Compaoré, as accusations mounted that he is one of West Africa’s
most corrupt leaders and supports insurrection in neighboring Ivory Coast.
Members of the media covering the corruption have been harassed, while
the December 1998 murder of journalist Norbert Zongo remains unsolved.
In February, Denmark decreased aid to Burkina Faso
from US$27 million to US$21 million after allegations surfaced that the
country had violated a U.N. arms embargo. Citing U.N. evidence, the Danish
government said that Burkina Faso’s capital, Ouagadougou, had become the
main transit point for weapons fueling wars in the region. Denmark also
cited delays in the probe into the Zongo murder as another reason for
the decision.
U.N. officials maintain that Compaoré and his Liberian
counterpart, Charles Taylor, regularly contravene international law for
personal gain. In October, a report in the French daily Le Monde
supported allegations by the Ivoirian government that Compaoré had hosted,
armed, and trained a group of discontented officers from the Ivoirian
army. On September 19, these Ivoirian officers launched a bloody rebellion
from their Burkina Faso base in a bid to topple their country’s government.
Compaoré later admitted his part in the coup attempt, to which European
media have also tied Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi.
In October, CPJ confirmed a Le Monde report
that in late September, the rebel Ivoirian soldiers kidnapped veteran
journalist Christophe Koffi, an Ouagadougou-based reporter for Agence
France-Presse, and drove him to a village on the Lareda River, near the
border with Ivory Coast. Koffi was released a week later, after rebel
chief Ibrahim Coulibaly had accused him of spying for the Ivoirian government.
Koffi was not injured during his captivity.
Koffi had earlier been detained on August 7 in connection
with a Burkina Faso police inquiry into the August 1 murder of Balla Kéita,
a self-exiled former Ivory Coast government minister. After Koffi’s release
the next day, police picked up Newton Ahmed Barry, editor-in-chief of
the private monthly L’Evénement, and asked him about his contacts
with Ivoirian journalists, as well as whether he worked for the Ivoirian
government. Barry was held for two days before being released without
charge.
As tensions between Burkina Faso and the Ivory Coast
escalated, nationalistic
hatred surged on both sides, most notably in the Ivory Coast, where more
than 3 million Burkinabes work on coffee and cocoa plantations. On August
6, Burkina Faso border police detained and interrogated six Ivoirian reporters
who were headed to Ouagadougou to cover Kéita’s death.
After hotly contested legislative elections in May,
President Compaoré’s governing Congress for Democracy and Progress party
saw its share of seats in Parliament shrink to 57 from 101 out of 111
total seats. Independent journalists and opposition leaders alike welcomed
the results, saying they showed the population’s dissatisfaction with
Compaoré’s rule.
On the evening of October 14, according to regional
news reports, President Compaoré survived an assassination attempt that
killed at least one senior Secret Service agent and maimed another. Unidentified
attackers hurled an explosive at the presidential limousine as it drove
down an Ouagadougou street, the reports said.
September 20
Christophe Koffi, Agence France-Presse

Koffi, a reporter
for Agence France-Presse, was kidnapped by Burkina Faso–backed rebel Ivoirian
soldiers in Burkina Faso’s capital, Ouagadougou, and driven to a village
on Lareda River, near the border with Ivory Coast. The journalist, who
was released a week later, said that during his captivity, rebel chief
Ibrahim Coulibaly repeatedly accused him of being a spy for the Ivoirian
government.
The rebel soldiers from Ivory Coast’s Muslim north
began fighting government troops on September 19 before agreeing to a
cease-fire and peaceful negotiations in mid-October. They claim that southern
Christians, who have ruled the country since independence from France
in 1960, discriminate against Muslims. Veteran reporter Koffi, who was
not injured during his ordeal, is from the south.
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