Africa Asia Middle East عربي Français PlusNews Film & TV Photo Radio free subscription Mobile RSS find IRIN on facebook follow IRIN on twitter



humanitarian news and analysis
a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

Advanced search
 Saturday 21 November 2009 Latest reports:
 
Home 
Africa 
Asia 
Middle East 
Weekly reports 
Global Issues 
In-Depth reports 
Maps 
Most popular 
 
HyperLink Bookmark and Share
BURKINA FASO: Food riots shut down main towns


Photo: Brahima Ouedraogo/IRIN
Rioters took to the streets in Burkina Faso's second city, Bobo-Dioulasso, in February 2008 protested rising food and fuel prices
OUAGADOUGOU, 22 February 2008 (IRIN) - Riots over the cost of living hit three major towns in Burkina Faso this week, a situation which has raised fears among some observers about the peaceful but impoverished country’s stability.

“This reaction was expected,” Laurent Ouédraogo, secretary general of the Confédération Nationale des Travailleurs du Burkina (CNTB) told IRIN, stating that the riots happened after anger welled up because of constantly rising prices for basics like food, cloth and petrol.

“Misery does not wait and you see people witnessing everyday rising prices and they do not know what to do. The situation is like having matches near cotton that can catch fire at any moment,” Ouédraogo said.

Protesters first swept onto the streets of Bobo-Dioulasso, the second largest city in the country, on Wednesday, when they attacked government offices and burned, shops, cars and petrol stations.

Protests continued in Bobo on Thursday when 100 people were arrested after a government delegation dispatched to make peace was stoned by rioters.

Similar protests erupted the same day in Ouhigouya, the third largest town in the country hundreds of kilometres north of Bobo-Dioulasso, and in another town in the west of the country, Banfora.

Government premises, mainly those of customs, taxes and street lights have been destroyed or burned by the demonstrators including merchants and traders who took on the streets to denounce mounting costs of taxes and goods.

The riots come two weeks after a government announcement that it was imposing “strong measures” to control the price of food and other basics which it said had increased by between 10 and 65 percent.

Life was returning to normal on Friday but soldiers, paramilitary and police forces could be seen at strategic points throughout all the towns and cities, as well as in the capital Ouagadougou, which had not seen any violence.

Speaking live on national television on 22 February, the Minister of Finance and Economy, Jean Baptiste Compaoré blamed high oil costs for the country’s woes.

“The government is working to find solutions, but the solution must be regional if we want a sustainable solution”, Compaoré said.

The government has confirmed it has been releasing emergency stocks onto the market to try to keep prices down. Some government officials said that informally customs has been blocking exports of grains and cereals, although this is not a nationwide policy.

The government also says it has also lowered taxes on some basic goods by between 30 and 35 percent.

Photo: Brahima Ouedraogo/IRIN
Damage caused to a shop by Bobo-Dioulasso

Compaoré suggested the government having “dismantled” fraud techniques used by traders to avoid paying import and export taxes was the cause of the violence. “This is where it is painful for them,” he said.

The Africa Flak blog, which is written from Ouagadougou, reported on 22 February that some local press has blamed new government taxes for the high prices, which the government “strongly denies”.

Other parts of the local media “claim that the new reforming Prime Minister has struck down much of the culture of bribes that the customs agents had set up with larger food merchants and grocery distributors” the blog reported.

Riots over high food prices have already erupted in Burkina Faso’s Sahelian neighbours Mauritania and Senegal this year which are unusual in the region for being highly dependent on imported wheat and rice, products which have become more expensive worldwide this year.

In West Africa that situation is being compounded by unusually high food prices because of a disrupted growing season in some parts of the region in 2007 and reports that traders are hoarding stocks at markets in northern Nigeria, Ghana and elsewhere.

Another West African country, Guinea Conakry, is deemed among the most unstable countries in the world by conflict analysts, in large part because of five successive nationwide anti-government riots over the last 18 months sparked by mass discontent over the rising cost of living.

bo/nr


Theme(s): (IRIN) Conflict, (IRIN) Early Warning, (IRIN) Economy, (IRIN) Food Security, (IRIN) Governance, (IRIN) Refugees/IDPs, (IRIN) Urban Risk

[ENDS]

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
HyperLink Bookmark and Share
Countries
FREE Subscriptions
Your e-mail address:


Submit your request
 More reports
  • 20/Nov/2009
    WEST AFRICA: IRIN-WA Weekly Round-up 505 for 14 - 20 November 2009
  • 13/Nov/2009
    GLOBAL: Global Fund approves $2.4 billion in new grants
  • 13/Nov/2009
    WEST AFRICA: IRIN-WA Weekly Round-up 504 for 7 - 13 November 2009
  • 12/Nov/2009
    GLOBAL: Mismatch between HIV spending and need
  • 12/Nov/2009
    GLOBAL: Disabled should claim rights in UN convention
     More on Early Warning
  • 19/Nov/2009
    Analysis: Upcoming polls to test Burundi's fragile peace
  • 17/Nov/2009
    SOUTH AFRICA-ZIMBABWE: More than 2,000 Zimbabweans flee, fearing attacks
  • 16/Nov/2009
    SUDAN: Increasing hunger could fuel conflict in south
  • 13/Nov/2009
    SUDAN: Kala azar "epidemic" in south
  • 12/Nov/2009
    SUDAN: The Nuba Mountains - straddling the north-south divide
     Most Read
    GUINEA: Timeline since independence
    GLOBAL: Children’s rights not yet a reality
    UGANDA: HIV-positive women need family planning services, study shows
    DRC-CONGO: New wave of refugees flees fresh fighting
    BANGLADESH: Two years after Cyclone Sidr, survivors still seeking shelter

    Services:  Africa | Asia | Middle East | PlusNews | Film & TV | Photo | Radio | Weekly | Live news map | Interviews | E-mail subscription
    Feedback | E-mail Webmaster | Terms & Conditions | Really Simple Syndication News Feeds | About IRIN | Jobs | Bookmark IRINnews | Donors

    Copyright © IRIN 2009. All rights reserved.
    This material comes to you via IRIN, the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States. The boundaries, names and designations used on maps on this site do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the UN. Republication is subject to terms and conditions as set out in the IRIN copyright page.