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UN Security Council fails to agree on statement on Burkina Faso coup

Wednesday February 09 2022
Captain Sidsoré Kader Ouedraogo, the spokesman for the Burkina Faso junta.

Captain Sidsoré Kader Ouedraogo, the spokesman for the Burkina Faso junta, announcing on television on January 24, 2022 that soldiers had taken power. PHOTO | RADIO TÉLÉVISION DU BURKINA | AFP

By AFP

United Nations,

The UN Security Council met behind closed doors Tuesday to discuss last month's coup in Burkina Faso but failed to agree on a joint statement on the junta's takeover, diplomats said.

According to a draft statement circulated by Ghana, the Security Council would express "concern" about the coup and demand the restoration of constitutional order, as well as the release of ousted president Roch Marc Christian Kabore.

Read: African Union suspends Burkina Faso after coup

The Council would also support efforts by the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), currently chaired by Ghana, to mediate the crisis.

However, the Council's 15 members did not agree on the statement. "We still have to negotiate," a diplomatic source told AFP.

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During the meeting, the Council members were briefed by the UN representative in West Africa, Mahamat Saleh Annadif, who recently visited Burkina Faso on a joint mission with an Ecowas representative.

Last week, Ecowas decided against toughening sanctions against Burkina Faso and instead demanded a timetable for a swift return to civilian rule.

Read: Ecowas leaders demand transition timetable from Burkina junta

The coup is the latest bout of turmoil to strike Burkina Faso, a landlocked state that has suffered chronic instability since gaining independence from France in 1960.

On January 24, Burkina Faso's military toppled the elected Kabore, who is currently under house arrest.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the day after the putsch that military coups are "unacceptable."

Read: International community unites in condemning Burkina Faso coup

"The role of the military must be to defend their countries and their peoples, not to attack their governments and to fight for power," he said.

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