Burkina Faso/Transition: The Regime of Captain Ibrahim TRAORE still under threat of destabilisation

The President of Faso, Captain Ibrahim Traoré, and his trustworthy collaborators remain under constant threat of destabilization. This situation arises simply because adversaries and power-hungry individuals have chosen to target them. Both external and internal accomplices are multiplying, along with their plans to achieve their objectives.

The real events and the statements of these accomplices reveal everything. These range from manipulations by stateless individuals and complicit media, to terrorist acts by criminal collaborators, as well as deserters who believe that negotiating with wrongdoers can resolve the security crisis in the Land of Upright Men.

Because the President has decided to respond effectively to the expectations of the Burkinabe people and to avoid empowering terrorists further, the allies of these wrongdoers are not pleased and are determined to harm the revolutionary leaders of Burkina Faso, similar to the past tragic fate of the late national hero, Thomas Sankara.

Messages of warning and support for the authorities and the aware Burkinabe populace are pouring in from everywhere, including from religious leaders who urge prayers for the life and protection of Captain Ibrahim Traoré. According to information, secret meetings are being held both inside and outside the country among these accomplices, which include local lackeys and even some from the armed forces, who are ready to sow chaos in their own country.

Individuals are willing to go to any lengths, in collaboration with imperialists and neocolonialists who bear a grudge against President Traoré, to remove him from their path. These warnings must be taken seriously by the peace-loving and sovereignty-seeking people, who should increase their vigilance and support according to various opinions, to continue thwarting the plans to destabilize the country.

The end of revolutionary military regimes in the AES would signify the end of the African revolution, the end of the dream of freedom and sovereignty, and a return to imperialism, neocolonialism, poor governance, servitude, and perpetual poverty in Burkina Faso and the Sahel.

Sadia Nyaoré