Burkina’s Bassole a ‘political prisoner’

Burkina Faso's foreign affairs minister Djibril Bassole and Malia's junta leader Captain Amadou Sanogo attend a news conference in Kati, outside Mali's capital Bamako, April 1, 2012. Sanogo promised to reinstate the constitution from Sunday, hours before a deadline set by West African neighbors to start handing over power, and as rebels encircled the ancient trading post of Timbuktu. Sanogo, who led a military coup on March 22, also pledged to re-establish all state institutions before organizing a transfer of power back to civilians through democratic elections. REUTERS /Luc Gnago (MALI - Tags: POLITICS MILITARY CIVIL UNREST)

Burkina Faso's foreign affairs minister Djibril Bassole and Malia's junta leader Captain Amadou Sanogo attend a news conference in Kati, outside Mali's capital Bamako, April 1, 2012. Sanogo promised to reinstate the constitution from Sunday, hours before a deadline set by West African neighbors to start handing over power, and as rebels encircled the ancient trading post of Timbuktu. Sanogo, who led a military coup on March 22, also pledged to re-establish all state institutions before organizing a transfer of power back to civilians through democratic elections. REUTERS /Luc Gnago (MALI - Tags: POLITICS MILITARY CIVIL UNREST)

Published Nov 5, 2015

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Paris - Burkina Faso's former foreign minister Djibril Bassole has accused transitional authorities of detaining him for political reasons to prevent him running in this month's presidential election, his lawyer said on Thursday.

Bassole, previously a joint UN-African Union mediator in Sudan's Darfur conflict and foreign minister under longtime leader Blaise Compaore, was arrested in mid-September accused of supporting a coup against the interim government ahead of scheduled elections.

“Djibril Bassole considers that he is still a presidential candidate and that he is a pure political prisoner,” Alexandre Varaut told a small group of reporters in Paris.

Varaut, speaking on his return from Ouagadougou, said that in documentation he had been given access to by the Burkina courts there was nothing supporting accusations against his client.

According to two sources familiar with the court proceedings, Bassole's charges include colluding with foreign forces to destabilise interior security.

“All of this is a blatant lie. He has nothing to do with the putsch. He is neither the organiser, an accomplice or a beneficiary,” Varaut said. “There is no damning evidence in this dossier. It is simply a way of preventing him from participating in the electoral process.”

The elite presidential guard led by General Gilbert Diendere took the country's president, prime minister and cabinet members hostage in mid-September, before scheduled elections. Protests erupted against the revolt, and Diendere was forced to hand back power after a week.

The government has since set Nov. 29 as a new date for presidential and legislative elections, seeking to get a transition to democracy back on track.

However, Varaut said Bassole's team of lawyers had appealed on Thursday to the region's top court to try to push Burkina to abide by a ruling made in July or suspend elections until the matter is clarified.

The transitional government changed the electoral law in April to exclude anyone who supported Compaore's bid to remain in power and in late August banned Bassole from running in the election.

The regional court for the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) later overruled the decision, but Burkina Faso's constitutional council has ignored its ruling.

While ECOWAS is the highest appeal tribunal in the region, it is not clear how it can enforce its decision.

“At this point the candidates have been ruled on by the constitutional court of Burkina Faso and that is the legitimate constitutional body so we need to move on with its decision since it's not appealable anyway,” Mohamed Ibn Chambas, UN Special Representative for West Africa told Reuters on Oct. 29.

Reuters

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