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Burkina: expulsion of three French diplomats for “subversive activities”

2024-04-18T15:03:59.699Z

Highlights: Three French diplomats, including two political advisors at the French embassy in Ouagadougou, were declared “persona non grata’ and asked to leave the territory within 48 hours. The three diplomats are Gwenalle Habouzit, Hervé Fournier, and Guillaume Reisacher, according to the Burkinabe ministry. Relations between France and Burkina have deteriorated since Captain Ibrahim Traoré came to power in September 2022 in a coup - the second in eight months. Burkina Faso has also suspended several French media outlets, including Le Monde, Radio, Radio France International and Le Mondes de Paris. The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs was not able to react immediately to the decision. The decision is a new sign of the current strong tension between this country and France, a French diplomatic source said. The diplomats were asked to leave the territory of Burkinabè in the next 48 hours.


The three diplomats were declared “persona non grata” and asked to leave the territory within 48 hours, in a climate of tensions between France and Burkina Faso.


Three French diplomats, including two political advisors at the French embassy in Ouagadougou, were declared

"persona non grata"

for

"subversive activities"

and asked to leave Burkina Faso, a new sign of the current strong tension between this country and the France. The three diplomats

“are declared persona non grata on the territory of Burkina Faso, for subversive activities

,” writes the Burkinabè Ministry of Foreign Affairs in a note addressed to the French embassy in Ouagadougou, a copy of which AFP obtained on Thursday. They

“are asked to leave the territory of Burkina Faso in the next 48 hours

,” specifies the same note dated Tuesday. The three diplomats are Gwenaëlle Habouzit, Hervé Fournier and Guillaume Reisacher, according to the Burkinabe ministry. Asked in Paris by AFP, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs was not able to react immediately.

On December 1, four French officials - intelligence agents according to the Burkinabè authorities, computer maintenance technicians according to a French diplomatic source - were arrested in Ouagadougou, then indicted two weeks later and imprisoned, according to the French source. . They are today under house arrest, according to security sources in Burkina. A year earlier, in December 2022, the Burkinabè government had expelled two French people who worked for a Burkinabè company, suspected by the authorities of being spies. Relations between France and Burkina have only deteriorated since Captain Ibrahim Traoré came to power in September 2022 in a coup - the second in eight months.

Reconciliation with Russia

A few months after coming to power, Ouagadougou denounced a 1961 military agreement with France in March 2023, after obtaining the withdrawal of French forces. The French ambassador in Ouagadougou, recalled after the coup, has not been replaced since. Burkina Faso has also suspended several French media outlets including Le Monde, Radio France Internationale, France 24, Jeune Afrique, and LCI. In its desire to diversify its partnerships, Burkina Faso has particularly moved closer to Russia. In addition to strengthening security relations, Russia has also promised to build a nuclear power plant in Burkina.

The Burkinabè military regime has also moved closer to its two neighbors, Mali and Niger, also governed by soldiers resulting from coups d'état in 2020 and 2023 and who have decided to cut their ties with the former power French colonial rule and to diversify their partnerships, in particular with Moscow. The three countries have faced recurring jihadist attacks for several years from groups linked to Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State. In Burkina alone, some 20,000 civilian and military deaths and around two million displaced people have been counted since 2015. These countries have grouped together within the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), which has announced its intention to create a joint armed force to fight jihadist groups. They also left the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), accused of being subservient to France and of not having supported them in the anti-jihadist fight.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2024-04-18

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